By AROu RbUMEL
fb tam Wri
Eve from distaee, the
aua of dth l heavy over
mnici airport this m -
kg.
A row of white sheeted
stetche stood uned
And an observer approach-
g th arpane ra scene
couldn't mistake the odor of
hired flesh bown down
wind by the brre.
w r to the se the m-
ber fac of police, men and
the acrio become vible. Am
klae driven rm local fa-
aral hbme saood by, waiting
que for orders to remove
the chrred bodies from the

Eerythh was spread he.
aeth a dismally overcast sky.
Late in the mning, ran be-
an to drin.
The bodi were viable.
zEcept for the tail section

of

Quiet

Charred Wreckage

All Thjqt Remains
1 1

and wings, the plane vas do.
stroyed.
The positions of the bodies in.
dictated that they brt had
time to attempt an escape.
Most were seated upright
where a seat once had been.
The seats were gone t the
bodies remained-frm into
position.
They were frozen first prob-
ably by frght Then by death.
Airport officials left th tn
touched until federal invetiga-
tors could arrive the' scenT
Late this morning they we
taken out and transported to
the Achua General Hopital
mor e The grasome jobof
identifying them was begun.

Horror

Until the coat of white foam
dissolved minutes later, the re.
mais of pane and passengers
seemed almost unreal they
looked ghostly.
Although there was tragedy,
there wasn't panic.
Police, sheriff's deputies and
firemen and the rius were
captured by a calm bred by
helplessness.
Officials parked cars state
cally around the crash and
strung rope from one to anoth-
er. They easily kept the spec
tators outside the ropes.
The spectators stood stunned.
They watched and talked
quiet n tones quiet as-
tonisbhent to companions.
But although no one pressed
close as the curious so often
do, few seemed willing to leave
the scene. Most just stood
transfixed.
They seemed unable to break
through the robe of tragedy
that rapped the cene.

An air of silent horror hung
over the scene.
Although the bodies were
plainly visible, they appeared
unreal. They were mere char-
red figures.
Although there e e ranks of
ambulances at the ene, there
were no busy attendants bust
ling about They just waited
patiently.
There was little they could
do.
Although there was fire, most
of it quickly was extinguished.
Firemen stood by, spraying
foam where flames occasionally
broke out At one point they
dosed the entire scene.

at

Lea

Airport

LIST

OF

VICTIM

Following is the list of passengers, released by th
Federal Aviation Agency, on the South Central Airlin
plane that crashed here this morning killing all aboard
Dr. J. Willingham, 1214 NW 36th Terrace.
D. V. Legate, 1801 NE 7th Terrace.

For Jax
By JEAN CARVER
San Staff Writer
Ten persons including four
Gainesville residents, four
Ocala residents and a Univer-
sity of Tennessee assistant bas-
ketball coach died in a plane
crash here this morning.
Crash victims were identified
by the Federal Aviation Agency
shortly after 1 p.m. (See ac-
companying list.)
The South Central Airlines
flight 510 was to terminate In
Tallahassee via Jacksonville.
South Central President Sam
Coester was at the scene of the

(More Pictures, Page 6)
wreckage this morning and ver-
ified reports that although the
plane has facilities for eight
passengers, a ninth passenger
S was sitting in the co-pilot's seat
at the time of the crash.
Federal Aviation Agency offi-
cials said the plane crashed on
takeoff and exploded and burn-
ed at approximately 8:05 a.m.
Coester said this was the
first crash involving fatalities
since South Central began op.
rating at the Gainesville air-
port in October.
Officials set up a morgue at
S Alachu General Hospital and
the 10 bodies were taken there
about two hours after the crash
when FAA and CAB officials
e arrived to begin investigating
the wreckage.
te Eye witnesses said the plane
was taking off from the north-
: east-southwest runway and was
about 200 feet off the ground.
D. M. Carroll a city mainten-
ance man at the airport, said
he heard the plane making a
"whizzing noise" and looked
up to see if it were in trouble.
"It was making this whizzing
sound. I noticed the motor on
the left side was turned off. It
swerved on its left side just like
a plane does high up in the air
when it's circling the field."
He said the plane was not
burning but burst into flames
when it crashed into the edge
of the runway and instantly ex-
ploded.
The wreckage scattered over
the northern edge a the main
runway at the north end of
6, the field.
Several people ran to the
- crashed plane and tried frantic-
ally to open a door.
Jo Anne Rowell, a secretary,
said the sound of the engine on
takeoff tdicated there was
some trouble. She said she im-
mediately went outside the ter-
minal.
Would be rescuers said they
could s people sitting in their
sat inside the craft but the
blame was so hot they had to
give up attempts to beak open
the door.
"We were trying to get the
floor open bt t was too hot,"
-aid Miss Rowell, who Joined
those at the wreckage. "We
ad see two people side.
hey were bning."
FAA flight service station
nager E. P. Robbing said
he weatsr station hee had
wor"al radio ctact wit the
S a bore the takeoff.

By HAROED RUMMEL
a ItfS WlMe
Even fm a distance, the
aa of death h heavy over
m icipl airport this mn
iJO.
A row of whIto sheeted
stretchers stood ed
And a observer approach
g the rplane crash sene
coulb't mistake te odor of
charred flesh ub down-
wind by the bremh
oe w to the a te nm
ber faces of poli, rmen and
the carious became ribe. Am-
klace drivers fro local fw i
ral homes stood by, waiting
quiey r orders to remove
the charred bodies from the
plane.
Everything was sp d be-
math a dismally overcast sk.
Late in the a in rain be-
n to drin le.
e t bodies na visible.
except for the tail section

of

Quiet

Charred Wreckage

All Tlhiat Remains

and wings, the a was de
strayed.
The positions of t bodies in
dieted tat they don't had
time to attempt 9 escape.
Most were seated upright
where a seat once had been.
lTe sats were ge but the
bodies rem ed-f into
They were froze first prob-
ably by fright T.n bydeath.
Airport officials t them un
tou d until fda investia-
tor could arrive scene.
Late this morni y were
taken out and traported to
the MAlacha General Hospital
mrgmue The grueso ob o
identifying them wasjbegun.
I ;

Horror

Until the coat of white foam
dissolved minutes later, the re.
mains of plane and passengers
seemed almost unreal they
looked ghostly.
Although there was tragedy,
there wasn't panic.
Police, sheriff's deputies and
firemen and the curious were
captured by a calm bred by
helplessness.
Officials parked cars strateg-
ically around the crash and
strung rope from one to anoth-
er. They easily kept the spec-
tators outside the ropes.
Ie spectators stood stunned.
They watched and talked
quietly in tes of quiet as
tonishment to companions.
But although no one presed
close as the curious so often
do, few seemed willing to leave
the scene. Most just stood
transfixed.
They seemed unable to break
through the robe of tragedy
that wrapped the sene.

An air of silent horror hung
over the scene.
Although the bodies were
plainly visible, they appeared
unreal. They were mere char-
red figures.
Although there were ranks of
ambulances at the scene, there
were no busy attendants bust-
ling about They jst waited
patiently.
Thpe was little thy could
do.
Although there was fire, most
of it quickly was extinguished.
Firemen stood by, spraying
foam; where flames occasionally
roke out. At one point they
doused the entire scene.

at

Airport

LIST

OF

VICTIMS

Following is the list of passengers, released by the
Federal Aviation Agency, on the South Central Airline
plane that crashed here this morning killing all aboard:
Dr. J. W. Willingham, 1214 NW 36th Terrace.
D. V. Legate, 1801 NE 7th Terrace.

ter aboard to do the jb.
Rae radild bak'word that
the order had ben recited at
1:1 a (PT), as itmw near
g the ed o a 5O ~s.p..-
ph pihm towad the mo's
Sea of Trjiulkty.
NaaMm edoglaers
ered abig ro at the Jet
ropa LIffboatory duted
to the ti of Rgs ,nrab
siWal as it was bdg ampled
btroP hnt.peattkes
TIm O dR the ve
wrup perd wm orw-e
evm u-i"eis vel a prod
all tht l was wl:*
Il pmI."
1tem foraeme l9 ,qca,
as huhe crowd bMod (D
t*a bouEBT a ,ID

TO FIND IT
*oCI ........,V O
* cmil ..... 11
9*odel .. Itf

Wh ......J.,s
oWCmr ,..,. ..Jt

Ma. a te.a kmtflImIS Pwn wr a

Craft

Heading

For Jax
By JEAN CARVER
Son Staff Writer
Ten persons including four
Gainesville residents, four
Ocala residents and a Univer-
sity of Tennessee assistant bas-
ketball coach died in a plane
crash here this morning.
Crash victims were identified
by the Federal Aviation Agency
shortly after I p.m. (See ac-
companying list.)
The South Central Airlines
flight 510 was to terminate in
Tallahassee via Jacksonville.
South Central President Sam
Coester was at the scene of the

(More Pictures, Page 6)

wreckage this morning and ver-
ified reports that although the
plane has facilities for eight
passengers, a ninth passenger
was sitting in the co-pilot's seat
at the time of the crash.
Federal Aviation Agency offi-
cials said the plane crashed on
takeoff and exploded and burn-
ed at approximately 8:05 a.m.
Coester said this was the
first crash involving fatalities
since South Central began op.
rating at the Gainesville air-
port in October.
Officials set up a morgue at
Alachua General Hospital and
the 10 bodies were taken there
about two hours after the crash
when FAA and CAB officials
arrived to begin investigating
the wreckage.
Eye witnesses said the plane
was taking off from the north-
east-southwest runway and was
about 200 feet off the ground.
D. M. Carroll a city mainten-
ance man at the airport, said
he heard the piane making a
"whizzing noise" and looked
up to see if it were in trouble.
"It was making this whizzing
sound. I noticed the motor on
the left side was turned off. It
swerved on its left side just like
a plane does high up in the air
when it's circling the field."
He said the plane was not
burning but burst into flames
when it crashed into the edge
of the runway and instantly ex-
ploded.
The wreckage scattered over
the northern edge of the main
runway at the north end of
the field.
Several people ran to the
crashed plane and tried frantic-
ally to open a door.
Jo Anne Rowell, a secretary,
said the sound of the engine on
takeoff indicated there was
some trouble. She said she hba
mediately went outside the ter-
minal.
Would be rescuers said they
could see people sitting in their
seats inside the craft but the
blae was o hot they had to
give up attempts to break open
the door.
"We were trying to get the
lor ope but t was too hot,"
aid Miss Rowell, who joined
those at the wreckage. "We
uid see two people inside.
'hey were burning "
FAA flit service station
naner E. F. Robbis said
he weather station here ad
rmal radio contact with the
law bef the takeoff.
See Amll a Pa p )

y JAMES MAROW Thee can be doubt that much
Asied Press News l of his mysicismn is any more

WASHINGTON (AP)-Fr hb
Prsdent Charles de Gulle,
like a man descending the
mountain with two tablets of
stone, for a year has issued
promoucements saying "no" to
Ameican policy.
He-tanned the British from
the European Common Market;
refused to agree
to a nuclear

of Red China.
I h ca : htet-ban *reaty;

ma beneit ato Fra neuwe-

monaL sin by itsl, im they
are ewed about nAsia,

le Is part o the Wet rn
I the sovereignty
... of Red China.
Ineach case he acknowledged
soml benefit to France. Ameri.
cans can't consider tis a
mortal sin by itself, since they
are concerned about benefits to
his country.t
Buthe is part of the Western
alliance. If there were a few
morn De Gaulles there could be

than political and personal im
maturity.
There t immaturity in his ob-
sessive nationalism wbch would
have been more fitti in i
18th Century when Napoan
was emergi and French i-
ons seemed unlimited.
But western Europe's natk
alsm brought two world wars
and chaos. To try to restoreit
as ntenel as De Gaulle
doing is to turn the dock bk
He has given dmorli
Force stability since stat
ed his reip n 1958-cg is not
an accurate word, for Fnnie
now looks more like a monareoy
than a republic-but there is no
assurance the deluge won't fol-
low him.
is persona mmaturty is hi
his need for gander and the
trappings of grandeur, in hIp-
se and France. He resents
what he considers affronts and
to maintain his ego retalates
with obstruction, like a chid

Salliance. tearing toys.
Mis repeated negations have On Jan. t 19 3 he arraned
been explained by apologists as for a news conference at a
the work of a man with a mys- a time and with such a purpose
tigal belief in the revival of-just shortly before the late
Fench greatness. But there has President John F. Kenedy
ben pettiness in much of what dressed Congess that he
he did, almost hostility. Ipedoed the President

Viet Nam's

By PETER GROSE
IEN CAT, South Vietnam -
NIj. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, new
leader of South Viet Nam's mil-
itirygovernment, departed Sai.
gi by helicopter Sunday for a
visit to peasants and soldiers
in the midst of an anti-gueril-
I1 operation.
continuing the burst of en-
e)L with which he has taken
u the reins of government
since seizing power three days
ao, Khanh turned his trip Sun-
day-into just the sort of psy-
cSldgical gesture Americans
urged upon South Viet Nam's
former leaders. Unlike his pred-
eessors, the 3-year-old Khanh
seemed to need no urging.

Rights Bill

Getting Test

Of Strength
WASINGTON (AP) Bi.
par h forces backing the civil
right-bill test their strength to-
day'i the House starts conid-
ering amendments to the meas-
ure,
BQ sides have been talking
since-ldebate opened Friday.
NoAis time for voting, with
the st of the week being set
askto work on proposed
cha in the 10-part bill.
Pmident Johnson and Speak-
er fn W. McCormack, D-
Mal have predicted the bill
willlm through the process
without being seriously weak-
ened.
Tlt.there will be plenty of
amendments offered was made
clearuring the two days of
general debate. Southerners are
unhap with every provision
and members from other parts
of tt. country have doubts
abouuome of them.

Immatu

Kennedy happy uncd a
aew era of interdependece
and unity taking shape" in
rope which "we regard as a
welcome partner . not a
rival." He was thinking of the
creation of the European Co
tnoo Market
But by the t he got the
words out De Gaulle already
demonstrated how ttle unity
there was by anacing he was
banning Britain from the mar-
ket. He said Britain was not a

Europea

Snation.

This was natioalism at Its
worst With Brtaa out of the
market, France fig to doo-
inate it, although the market
was intended as one more step
toward subordinating national-
ism to common interests.
That wasn't al De Gaulle did
tt day. He rejected Amer-
can-Brish proposals for a mul-
tteral NATO nuclear for
a ed with Polaris misil&-
tg submarines.
If that wasn't enough, De
Gulle cast doubt on American
Wlingess to defend France
from Russian attack, now that
the Soviet Union had missile
whh could estry America
The agreement on the multi-
lateral force had been reached

I0
irity

milln. De Gaulle may have
felt offended by not being in-
luded in the meeting.
On June KRemedy p ed
to rik destruction of American
cities to preserve European
freedom but two days later De
Gaulle's information minister
warned Europe against trusting
its safety to America ideinite-

The United States, Britain and
the Soviet Union on July M5 ini-
tialed a nuclear tot-ban treaty.
Four days later, De Gaulle said
France would not sign and in.
tended to develop its own nu-
clear weapons.
Then on Aug. 29 although
the United States has pumped
billions in aid into South Viet
Nam to help the war against
the Communist guerrillas of
North Viet Nam-De Gaulle pro-
posed the two Viet Nam be
neutralied with French help.
Such a step could wreck the
whole Southeast Asia Treaty Or-
ganation.
France had been driven out of
Viet Nam in 1S, after holding
it as a colony since the 19th
century. Neutralition, with the
United States withdrawn, might
enable France to recapture

r few weeks before at a meetsome of its old influence.

Netd Leader

Heavy artillery batteries -
ing into the guerrilla i
marshland frequently drowt
out the stocky young general
words as he joked with village
children, gave pep talks t
troops and declared his dct
mination to do a better job f
fighting the commuiss tha
the military junta which ura-

The reaction of American ad-
viers and obseers on hear-
hing Kmh argue points tey
have been trying to make for
months was good so far.
Khanh the man now
leading a battle In which Amer
ican prestige is id square-

ceded him. y on the line may not have
The essential requirement fo assumed power under auspic-
defeating the Communists is th ou circumstances. The initial
have the rural population witl reaction of diplomats and Vi-
the government, Khanh said etnamese alike was that coups
"not just the people of Saigou Wle last Thursday's could tend
but the people here in the count to be habit forming. Observ-
try. Here is where the people ers, however, found little to
are suffering and need to criticize in Kan's words or
protected. .deeds thus far.

French Attitude

Is Worrying U.S.

By JOHN M. IIGHTOWER .Nam, Maj. Gen. Nguyen
WASHINGTON (AP) U.Si K h1a n h, that the operations
officials are expected to seek against the Communist Viet
clarification from Paris in the Cong forces will be stepped up
next few days as to what Presi- immediately.
dent Charles de Gaulle means To some authorities in Wash-
in proposing a neutrality treaty ington it appeared that if De
for Southeast Asia and what helGaulle presses his neutralize
intends to do about it. tion proposal to the extent that
Along with De Gaulle's rec .it threatens to upset the anti-
ognition of Red China, the neu- Communist war effort in South
tralization plan is a source oflViet Nam, Washington Paris
deep concern at the highest ten ions could become much
levels of U.S. government. greater.
From President Johnson! Johnson said that as he un-
down, U.S. leaders are worried derstood De Gaulle's proposals
about the impact of French 'the neutralization talk has ap-
moves in the Far East and es- plied onl to South Viet Nam
specially in, Viet Nam, where this'ad ot to the whole area of the
country has more than 15,000 wold.
men eniaed in a fight against I think," he continued, "that
Communist expansion. the only thing we need to do to
Uncertainty over De Gaulle's have complete peace inthat
proposal was evident in area of the world now is to
dent Johnson's news conferences the invasionof SouthViet
Saturday when, discussing the Nam by some of its ng

Th-beaviest fire will unneutralization plan, Johnson
doogbfily be directed at pro.-told reporters "you will have to'
posals banning racial discrim- ask Gen. De Gaulle about the
inion in employment, public details of his proposal."
accommodations and federally From other high officials It
aided programs. But the vari- was learned that the United
ou sections will be open to States does not know precisely
amendment in the older inwhat if any, action De Gaulle
wl0ih they appear in the bill, has in mind to carry out his
which brings the one dealing propoitio. If he s talking
wi0( voting rights first under about a vague, ulthate goa,
attek. perhaps years off, they see no
iu provision, mainly amend- great difficy. But if he in-
ing listing laws, is designed o ten now to age a campai
sped up court action n voting fr ntralintio f South Vet
ca and to enu that an Na, they se rious trouble
voter qualification standards ahead.
ar( apped equay to whites F owo up hbi rlmiti
nd-Negro of Red Chin lat Monday, De
aUlh ns say the areaof GaBe told a Par conference
otig qualifications rbd tohat a Pt cont e
.o to the state. They ploa M f -at
to ffer an amendment t clearly en f b Oflst-
l tie the proposal to federal NA he w
e leaders have pr mied wof Ret b wuldt
....- my.v c on to Smy w u W nabity ws*
th4 final vote wll comMe by ai t a e t i- U
FeL.a nBt Riepuhas, .a-, m ing rIme n
boi i-ekve town this weekend t ad i at the
to U kmeo Day rep countries to W mkYle ap
m hope it can be ply.ou ,
po of by Fridy or Sturda Johnson saM Id Co
After that it Ipe tom sate, sn North V N Sd U
wWe a Southern filihst ppor is uts e l an s Is mU
epectd to bre sW OW to 1er tbadbiu s"nI m
bri I'to aw volte. he a.

the a W-." i
=heaoiigth"gott
WcoMmn iraml f t I
- lt their m n in k
pra" ad Ia I e I M

With obrir nUation
-JoamnM rmommin Fr
------.I,

aIu supponers.
In other words, by contrast
with De Galle's apparent de
si, Johnson se no posibilit
of arriving at a peaceful soi-
tion fr South Viet Nam c pt
through carrying the preaet
war to a suincceufil c dcsau.

WASHINGTON (AP)-In the
news from Washington:
Wheat: Announcement is ex-
pected early this week of the
sale of X million bushels of
wheat to Russia. The exporter
is believed to be Cargill, Inc., a
major Minneapolis concern.
Some 7.84 million bushels of
durum wheat are thought to be
part of the deal. It is known
that the Agriculture Depart-
ment has agreed to pay export
subsidies averaging 78.5 cents
a bushel on the durum wheat,
and this may lead to criticism
in some congressional quarters.
The subsidy compares with
an average of 73.5 cents a bush-
el to be paid on about 13 million
bushels of durum sold to Russia
by the Continental Grain Co. of
Minneapolis and New York
Smaller amounts of durum sold

to other countries
ranged as low as
busheL
The department
in durum prices
78.5 cent subsidy.

lately have
56 cents a

says a rise
accounts for
But the fact

that subsidies on Russian-bound
wheat are running considerably
higher than those on wheat sold
elsewhere led to congressional
complaints that the department
is paying not only the differ-
ence between domestic and
world prices but a part of the
cost of transportation on Amer-
ican ships.
The export subsidy is de-
signed to enable American ex-
porters to meet the competition
posed by lower priced world
markets.

Transfer: Mrs. John F. Ken-
nedy moved Saturday into her
new home in Washington's
Georgetown section, a 170-year-
old town house not far from
the one in which she and John
F. Kennedy resided after their
marriage.

Worship: Prsid and Mrs.
Johnson attended tole morning
services sunday at the Nationl
City rtan murch, then
geeed fellowrshipers at a
coffee hour hI the church hal.
Johnson is a member of the
Chistian Crch and as vic
president ateded the National
City QCur frequently. This
-w hi fi n it M am ai b

tbcentury living with the
y's colonies heritage bgb
a redevelopment project caled
Society H
To preserve the colonial at,
mosphere, the city has come up
with a special treatment for the
S& k project area, often
cled "America's mast htfrIc

Instead d mass clearing of
sml dellip, meal h red
ld Times a being relbiltat-
d ito eod ityle hoaes,
Complete ih m l, asd,
tuck -rdMu
A touch of the modem is pro
vided by foor apartment hbu-
ip and new colonial-syled
town houses.
Offically the aim of the proj-
ct is to: (1) re back into the
downow area families that
had movd to the sbbs, (2)
preserve several hundred old
ad historic houses, (3) halt the
sead blight in cmter city
and crate a strong me ential
area a (4) create a tourist at
tract focused on Indepad-
ence Bal.
In the past, the city's Rede-
velopnet Authority attacked
ums wh wholesale removal
of blighted are ad cotru
tia of entirely new buildings.
Then the authority decided
that in order to be really effe-
tive, new projects should o
serve and rehabilitate neighbor-
hoods.

R FLASHES

NEW YORK (AP)-me ock
market moved at around dead
enr eary tis aftem with
ome g shown air-
line ad selected issues.
Most mchm d e tcks
we u l iltboog a few
moved a point or either way.

Tk markt mnd to be
feeling it way ang after
racking up aga for Juary
ad now ntera Febary, a
moth wit a spotty record, his-

News of strong demad if
steel a d o igrs gains in
new orders for business firms
Ia January rved to drngtr
e the market bqklrgId, but
the high level d stock pr
caed hesitation
Steels, cirette issues and
aerospace stocks were lightly
gher balance. Farm Imp
m rail awd hldW g ma-
r word lower. Cmi-
c oils and a unerrau met-
a w mixed
The Associated Press aver-
a de of stocks at was
Off .1 at W.5 with industrial
off .1, rails off .6 ad utilies
up .3.
be Dow Jones industrial av-
erage at noon was up 1.0 at
Prices movad g ll high-
er in quiet trading on the Amer-
can Stock Ea hange.

Side Line

EAST S. LOUIS, II. (AP)-
Burglars broke ito the vault at
Cty Hal early Sunday- half-
ock n the police saion-
ad fld with about $14,0 in
ilver.
Polie said the burglars also
broke into a soft drink machine
ad drank while they worked to
open the vault in the basement.

lat November 2, minutes
after the nes m la that Pre-
ident Kennedy ad th Gover-
nor of Teas had been shot,
citizens ac the nation rus-
ed to their local blood banks to
depot the "accounts" of the
victim in Dallas. This little-
known detail of the Presiet's
assassination illustrates the uni-
que operation of the National
Clearinghouse Progrm f the
Americ As. of Blood Banks
and the Red Cross ne of
the fstet growing and modst
valuable "banking" system in
he U. S. tod.
Blood banking ha now grown
ro a imple local storage
operation to an elaborate a
tionwide network modeled after
our Federal Reserm b anking

other state who is unde
ing an operation and needs
blood. You donate a po at
your local blodbak to be
credited to your frin's ac-
count. Your local bank lamed-
tel forwards a rpcity
credit a IOU to one o
the five district clearing-
houses in New York, Chicago,
Jacksonville, Dallas and San
Francisco. Credit is issued to
the supplying bank ad the
blood is made available "on
paper" to the receiving bank.
At the end of each month
accounts are balanced and ac-
tual bind may be transferred
from onea staon to another to
cover deficits that may have
occurred. In cases of a local
shortage which might oc-

cur f very rare blood types are
neded muples are d-
lately shipped from more affli-
ent banks
It Is clearly a variation of
our money system. By pooling
their assets, the blood clerig-
huses help inure beer dstri-
abuion of blood of every d-
nominatim in local blood

r-- .: Baby Foils
li. most poplar local blood
pan today the group say- Au o ThefI
ins pn under whic a MIAMI (AP) A Montreal
as eplo of a company or oup t their car and baby
member a tivic association, for 23 minutes Sunday and they
blood regularly to your pbably hav e t abyto thak
gou's account to covr yur for gettn the auto back.
Mr. and Mrs. Albrt JeraMs
needs a your fal re. had left 8montold Jrassy
quir.ments whebthn ey seepi in theback seat ile
arise. Per l account plans they asked about rooms at a o-
under which your donated blood teL Whte they wv t otsde, ar
cables a credit for your-. fn a b
self, are available too. Youe y thraeda thea ief
may ; f ta credit to repay abandoned the auto a
rece l am to yrself oryour aotdng the sleepig ifat
family or release it throu
the claringhou program for
anyone n need anywhe re Book Mending
S anywhere in the nation.
us M&s Hemphl remarked Demonstration
during an interview hi New
York recently, the blood ipe. A dm mnstraton mn adi
line, like ar money ipeine, linary books w be held Tm
help.put the blood (money) day at U JL amthe Gatel -
"at the riot plae, at the right PulM y.
e and in the right Mae Merina i o t Dea-
aMouts." te AABB now is co Library Supplis, Maiso,
ga the organiatdon of onsi, wi instruct on the
a tund the-world blood bank- echnips d repairing books
a s m to fAilitate inter- AD wl are ted are in-
coatn traders. vied to t aed.

JIM VOYLES
APPLIANCE CO.
Whow Service Is A Special
419 NW.IA Av. wml-3.

6mwmm

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No Local Afair!

Now comes the editor of the Ocala
Star-Banner, who take umbrage at
- our editorial views of the racial situ-
ation in adjacent Marion County.

SHere's the story.

Negro pickets have paced the
Courthouse Square unmolested for
weeks. But the social protest was so
obviously Negro versus white, they
asked for help to show some white-
Negro unanimity. A Gainesville
group, composed of University of
Florida students, agreed. They ad-
vised Ocala police officials of their
intentions to join the Negro pickets
and to obey the law while doing so.
On a Saturday in December, twelve
whites integrted the picket line.

No violence occurred. The only
crowd gathering was composed of
public officials, who engaged in ani-
mated conversation. Then in one fell
swoop, Oeala police moved in and
arrested the eight active pickets.
Also arrested were four white men
who were not picketing. They were
merely adult advisors to the student
group. The charge against all was
"breach of the peace."

No Negroes were arrested.

The Ocala Star-Banner editorialist
says we ought to keep our nose out
of that affair. He condemns our "out-
side interference in local problems."
He accuses us of not cleaning up
Gainesville's racial backyard. And he
lays we sought to aim our ire at ra-
ial incidents in "New York City,
Chicago, Philadelphia and other
northern cities."

We're sick up to the belly button
with editors who rant and rave about
strife in the Congo but are silent
about strife in the shadow of their
own city hall. This is the breed that
tells all about Ascension, but nothing
about local tension. The racial prob-
lem we can do something about is
right here in Florida not in "New
York City, Chicago, Philadelphia and
their northern cities."

And as for efforts to ease com-
munity racial tensions while achieve.

ing some egre of progress, we'll
match Ga#esvilles reward against
that of any oter town in the state.
We hope tre ainesville Sun helped,
but our editorial pages certainly have
been replee rith efforts anyway.
We've been a used of being a lot of
things, but, never of being "silent."

And, finally sir, your racial prob-
lem isn't "l6cal"

Your police moved in on twelve of
our whitest living Negro pickets
unmolested. It was rank discrimina-
tion to single 'them out for arrest,
even conceing (and we don't) a
breach of tie peace threatened.
i ,
They wee exercising freedoms
enumerated, in the U.S. Bill of
Rights and the Fourteenth Amend-
ment, which establish the right for
"the people, peaceably to assemble"
without federal or state interference.

And what your police did by ar-
resting the Gainesville group was
to fracture the' Florida Constitution
Declaration bf rights, which plainly
states, "All! men are equal before
the law.. .
1
We maintain that if Ocala police
go unchallAiged in the arrest of
twelve penrns'by skin color, then
they automatically establish the right
to arrest anyone because of his re-
ligion or because of his political par.
ty or because he eats garlic. Hitler
had a lot es than that to operate
with-and lok what he caused.

The threat to. constitutional gov-
ernment is soactitely obvious that we
can't conceive of the arrests holding
up in any cdurt' in the land at
least, any court outside the limits of
Marion County.

Now that 'constitutional govern-
ment has beon clobbered so badly
south of us,, we're watching with
eager eyes how Ocala makes out
with another provision, found in both
US. and Flor;a constitutions:

'The accused shall have the right
to a speedy ahd public trial, by an
impartial jury.."

Efficient City
Spending Absent
EDITOR. Sun: I know you
won't print this because you
would not print a letter a
friend of mine wrote several
days ago. You are very care-
ful not to print anything tht
will expose ineffient city
operation. I ase tmt you
would be intereed i upo
ing poor, inefficient, oal op-
eraton of th govern
ital st.
On wig of te cky gy-

extremely e srl in
ma waysi tp two yea
or amre An every em-
ploy f any Stai hI
ben fun hd a mewcar
every year at Ie eapue d
the nwly auzeend tax ay.
e. There ems to be e
emom about the tax mm
r the operating cots hi v-
ed.

There is abo evidem t
the lack of de my d
safety carries ewr to Ir
ifaorcemit deqartmat. L
Woms dawn that vs
mt by the i e te bw

SOME OF THE measures
were petty and backfired.
Virginia, for example, per-
suaded herself in the legisla
tve session of 75( that a
conviction for petty lar.
ceny would bar a great many
Negres. But, alas, many
poor whites also turned up as
petty thiem
Misl ip, South Carolina
and Louisana poded the
major eiu for voiding
the IIt ameradent (In 119
ths three at ha d the
larMt pereitage d Negro
pontt i t.) 11 MilMipp
eon dntio tht year et
up a nie e m quirement
l two ye a emulative
poll ex a peequlite for
voting d a lieracy test
T s tat bd ahera ave.
A voter had be able to
read any section the state
constitution. The Legilature
reflected. That would never
do. Ite biB was diged to
say that a wr who had
the Cio.niin read to him
and who 'sid od t" was
eligible.'lh enabled vol.
g officials to find waie vet
em were sa to understand,
others we not.

0 Ias fork ita
By JAllM IRUmN
WASHINGTON -It is far
to early o pick a cadidate
for the vie peakdnr y der
President Johnon but it is not
too soo to define the prici-
pls on which that sledion
should be made.
He should be as the foding
fathers ended the person
best qualified afer the Prei-
dent to arve am th ch e-
cutive of the nation.

SAPH McGILL
f A as (Wd CeuOn

History

Of Limits

On Voting

Adoption of a constitutional
amendment to ban the poll
taxis a a prerequisite voting
in federal election has kept
perhaps as many white per-
S from exercising the
chise as Negroes. The poll
tax is, indeed, one of the
several explanations for the
fact that Southerners in ge
eral, including white citizens,
have a lower percentage of
voting than do residents of
other regions.
Indeed, a productive irony
of the Souths several de.
vices to restrict the ballot,
which were originally design-
ed to bar the Negro, is that
they rather soon began to
disranrchi whites and to de-
base the tire process of
elections and choosing repre-
sentatives.

GEORGIA, for example,
eliminated the poll tax in
1945 during the progressive
adinistratim of Governor
Ellis Arnall. But the move-
ment had strong support from
a former governor, Eugene
Talmadge, then preparing to
campaign in the next election.
He frankly stated that the
cumulative pol tax was a bar
to thousands of his everloyal
supporters in the sall, ow
income rural counties. Gover-
nor Arnall would not have
succeeded had not his moat
implacable political foes rec.
ognized that they would gain
more voters than he by elim-
inating th tax.
Restrictions on voting in
the South began about IM
and reached full flower about
190. A variety of ingenious
schemes grew out of the de-
cision by the called South-
em Bourbons to insure their
political rule by limiting the
ballot. Back of all of hern
was the determination to ex-
clude the Negro voter. But
the Bourbons, having lived
through the clamorous period
of Populist and agrarian pro-
test, were also eger to at
least clip the voting wings of
the small, back country
white farmers who had flock-
ed strongly to Tom Wat.
son, William Jennings Bryan
and other leaders of the poli-
tics of protest.

Backstairs

Kennedys, for example, re-
ports a unidentified pro-
fessial poll in New Hamp-
Sshire that gve 11 Demo
cratic votes to Kennedy out of
715 for the vice presidency, 23
to Mayor Waner of New
York, who ran second, and 19
to Hubert Humphrey, the
Democratic senator from
Minnesota.
Bartlett says the Attorney
General has not yet decided
whether be "wants to tie his
family name and his own fut-
ure to the Johnm adminis-
tration" but the writer reach-
es the conclusion that Robert
Kennedy "has now become
almost a political necessity to
Lyndon Johnson."
Joseph Alsop doesn't go
quite that far, but notes the
enthusiastic reception recently

BELOW OLYMPUS

Pressure

received by Senator Edward
Kennedy on the West Coast,
and observes that "the Ken-
nedy legacy is a very real
thing, which still needs to be
carefully weighed by Presi-
dent Johnson."

THERE IS also agitation
here for President Kennedy's
brother-in-law, Sargent Shri-
ver, who heads the Peace
Corps and may soon be in
charge of a new government
agency to deal with the na-
tion's poverty. Shriver said
last week that he didn't think
he'd be asked to be the vice
presidential candidate, but
added that he thought Bobby
would "be terrific." After all,
be asked, "Who's got a better
record?"
No doubt all this was inevi-

By Intedrandi

THE PRINCPLE is all
the more important became
the President must now lad
a coalition of nations in a time
of turmoil,direct the nation
through a scientific and social
revolution of almost unbe-
lievable proportions, avoid
a constitutional crisis with
the Congress inthe process
and stay alive.
No decision that President
John makes this year will
tell us more about hil charac-
ter or establish a better stand.
ard by which he should be
elected or rejected in Novem-
her. And the unfortunate
thing about it is that some
politicians in his party seem
determined to foreclose the
President's choice by running
campaign onthe side for
their favorite vice presiden-
tial candidates.
For example the Demo-
cratic Party boss in Buffalo,
Peter Crotty, has ordered
his loyal echmen to endo
Attorney General Robert
Kennedy for the vicepresi-
dency. A Hartford, Conn.,
lawyer, Joseph Fauliso, also
started a Kennedy-for-vice-
president movement, and
while there is no evidence that
the Attorney General had
anything to do with either of
these moves, they had the
usual political consequences.

By RICHARD WILSON
Chief, Cnwles WashingLt
Bure
WASHINGTON If the
truth is to be reported ac-
curately, Margaret Chase
Smith's candidacy for presi-
dent is regarded by some
Republican leaders as a nui.
dance. They are too chival-
rous, or prudent, tsa y so
not because women vot-
ers outnumber men by a crit-
ical number but because Mrs.
Smith is a woman of tal-
ent and ability.
Even if she were not a wo-
man she is regarded as be-
yond the optimum years for
the presidency, and at the
same judgment would apply
if she were man. If elected
she would at t7 be the sec-
ond oldest president ever in-
augurated. She would be 75
before she would have com-
pleted a second term and thus
would have outdistanced
Dwight D. Eisenhower, the
oldest American president, in
all respects of longevity. Of
the 35 individuals who have
been sworn in aspresident,
seven were in their 0s and
no reached 70 until Eis-
enhower in his last few
months in the presidency

IN ALL 01 R respects,
Mrs. Smith has qualifications
and experience for the presi-
dency no le tha many
men who have sveld H this
ofee. She has served ably in
the House and Saute and
longer there ta either Pres-
ident Truma or President
Komedy. With de respect
to bo pride ,Mrs. Smith
has bee, i her way, a re-
spected in Cogress as were

the men who become presi-
dent when they were in Con-
gress.
By any objective measure,
therefore, the question with
respect to Mrs. Smith is re-
duced to a matter of age and
sex.
The matter of age is not to
be dismissed casually. It
would be a rare 67-year-old
man who would be seriously
considered in this day for the
cruelties of the American
presidency unless he had al-
ready served one term, and
even there would be concern
over his age. All other con-
siderations aside, Mrs.
Smith's age tends to be a dis-
qualifying factor.

THE MATTER of her sex is
a more general problem which
she wishes American voters
to face as it has faced elect-
ing a Catholic president and
may face in the future on
electing a Jew or a Negro.
on th general question of
electing a woman president
several physical facts cannot
be ignored At the optimum
age for America presidents,
i their latter forte and
early fifties, the female of
the species undergoes phyi-

cal changes and emotional dis-
tress of varying severity and
duration. This is common to
women and has a widely stu-
died physical and psychologi-
cal phenomenon which is
known to have an effect on
judgment and behavior.
Child bearing is another
phenomenon which interferes
with normal activity for vary-
ing lengths of time according
to the physical condition and
emotional attitude of women.
It might be assumed, there-
fore, that the demands of the
presidency are so exacting,
and so little susceptible to in-
terruption, that a woman
should not be considered for
the presidency unless she does
not bear children or is well
beyond the child bearing
age. This is now the case
with Mrs. Smith. It might
not be the case with other
women considered for the
presidency.

THE PARAMOUNT politi-
cal question, however, is
whether a woman, in the
present age when government
is mostly man's work, could
supply the necessary qualifi-
cation of leadership. H i story
does not help much. Women
have both reigned and ruled
in great nations and led great
movements. But in modern
times no woman has been
elected to supreme office. Nor
in those ancient societies most
comparable to our own,
Greece and Rome, could a
woman seie power r win it,
except for the mythical Ama-
zons or the very limited ma-
triarchaltribal states which
did not fien in word poli-
tics as we know It today.

POTOMAC FEVER

By Fletcher Kae Cwls Washingto Bureau
Busiua predict a boom. It won't be like the old days whe the only
man living off the fat of the land was the girdle manufacturer.

HaroM Stal s a deterred to show the country hew drema t
waIt wIk byh s ing for Presidt with a amiualitloa.
"You a he be h liberal and frugal," says President Johaon. Here, Santa
Clau, just M Ito this li or atnitjacket
gsate ides The ar e ws a Bier ad Bobby, a am rauwed fer his
= O Wd I you a i1 by a wlk eo hit eye--d a whir to pal in

The odds are, as Mrs Smith
has said, very much against
her; it was indeed because
they were so great that she
decided to run, What bothers
Republican politicians is that
she has complicated an al-
ready hopelessly tangled sit-
uation. What bothers the ad-
vocates of women's rights is
that the o b s t a c es to Mrs.
S mit h's nomination are so
great on counts other than sex
that her cause is hopeless and
tends to make a travesty of
the women's rights cause.
This was said also of those
who advocated women's suf-
frage.
Only three years ago it was
commonly said a Catholic
could not be elected president.
The concept of a Jewish pres-
ident was for the vaudeville
stage, but a man with Jew-
ish forebears is making a ser-
ious bid and will not be re-
jected because of their rehg-
ion. Also, there are Negroes
in this country who have out-
standing qualifications for the
presidency It would be a wise
man who could accurately
forecast that a woman, a Ne-
gro or a Jew would not rise
someday to the presidency.

Facts Make

Farce of Critic

0 Ntw lurk Simm
MOSCOW A marathon
New York piano concert last
September in which an M
second work was played 840
times in a row was given a
rather stiff review in a Soviet
newspaper the other day.
The performance of 18 hours
40 minutes by a relay team of
10 pianists was presented by
Sovetskaya Kultura as an
"inventive business stunt"
intended to yield a fat profit
for the producer.
Listeners paid S for ad
mission but received a refund
of 5 cents for every 3 minutes
of the late Erik Satie's "Vex.
nations "
"You can easily imagine
the half-conscious state of a
single listener who held out
to receive the full $3 refund,"
the paper said. "Concert or.
pniars happily rubbed their
bands counting their profit.
For them the subjected Vex-
tio' produced substantial
satifactions."
The paper neglected to
mention an important point:
Fir regulations in the
Pocket Thater, where the
concert was played, Imuted
ting capacity io Ii.

I y Me l, pemury 3, 1

msAuk .hm

07iOWtMa9s*lMiWuE

table. In fact, the President
himself has encouraged this
kind of agitation by mention-
ing casually all kinds of
names in connection with
the vice presidential nomi-
nation, and this too is stand-
ard procedure in normal
times.
The trouble is that these
are not normal tunes The
President of the United States
is solely responsible now for
deciding whether nuclear
weapons are ever to be used
in defense of the free world.
His actions affect not only the
security of the American peo-
ple, but the well-being and in
time of war even the survival
of many other peoples who
have no vote or voice in the
selection of an American Pre-
sident and vice president.

IN THIS SITUATION, with
a president who has had a
heart attack and is now fav-
ored to win the election by an
ever wider margin in the polls
than General Eisenhower in
1952 or '56, the principle of
picking the vice president
solely on his capacity to be
president is stronger than
ever.
This is not to say that
Robert Kennedy or Sargent
Shriver are ruled out by this
simple test, but merely that
the choice should not be made
on the grounds of who can
pick up minority votes or sen-
timental pro-Kennedy votes
for the President.
If the central question is
put in a wrong way, the
answer can easily be wrong.
The question that primarily
concerns the nation is not who
can get votes but who can
best run the country, and it
could e\en be that in the press.
ent unusual circumstances,
good morals for once could be
the best politics.

I Wmk k

4 barnum em Asowne. i

- A number of large mpani are
making what couM be a met impor-
,iA t contribution to the solution of
the high school drop-out problem.

They are hiring groups of these
youngest and giving them on-tbh.
job training. The Equitable Life As-
s. urance Society of New Yotk mreftb
ly employed 25 youngsters who had
quit school. At the same time it ob-
tained the name of another 25
whom it intends to follow, but ot
...employ. The latter group, it hopes,
will provide a comparison with the
employed group in ways that might
reveal new approaches to the prob-
lem.

A spokesman for the company sa
the program is not entirely altrusti.
Tbe company, he id, of course
hopes to turn up ome good mply-
ec for the future and eve perhaps
'build future cuatmeMn amo other
who may succeed n later yatn.

The company il oly one of many
.usines concerns around the country
that are trying in one way or another

to do armethig about the problem.
All of them ir prmlptd by the
knowledge thdt the cumulative ef-
feet of larger and larger numbers
of discouraged misfits with each new
gevationu is found to be bad for
the entire couNtry.

Perhaps th one thing a greet
many of dropout youngsters need
is simply a *ob opportunity. For
others it maybe the discipline of
job taponsibiltty, or the assurance
of a regular p check.

Teachers employers and most
parents are aware of the fact that
completion of (a high: school edu-
cation in most cases makes it a bit
easier for a yoAngster to obtain em-
ployment and find a starting place
for the future.iThat knowledge and
conviction, however, comes to many
youngsters only through rough and
often regrettable experience.

The companies that re trying to
help thee youngsters deserve great
credit for botht their foresight and
generosity.

EDITOR, un: In view of
the fie way the Gaesville
Ma brought to the atteti of
the people the hue rpir
racket and Ilghtto a ha
thiniir dalng wit our
ctium, it rwod be wel for
The, Su to warn te people
that. orgaunlatia I isumak
plans, In the City of aeoai
ville, to enter into the homes
of people, without the people's

PFm te C4wle WesIgay imew
NAME DROPPMR: When Joseph W. Barr of Indan was
swon i as a Director of the Fedral Deposit Insrance
Corp. last week, President Johnson told of the thme he was
getting ready to make a speech in Indiana in 1I1. A very
young, attractive man said to me 'don't forget that I am a
candidate for Congrea fri this district and mention my
name, Joe Barr.'" T Preident said be talked abet the
glories of the Democratic Party, asd finally rnae bred
Barr's request. "I said 'I have another favor to ask of ye.
There is a joung, progressive, attractive, well educated fe
low who is running for Congress,' and I couldn't think of his
name. want to tell you people that he is one of the finet
candidates I have ever observed.' And I still couldn't think
of his aame. About that ti I heard a fellow whisper 'Barr
Joe Barr.' I looked around and it was the candidate him-
self."

DhCRIMINATO? The lIt tine the nelm atml lead
ers visited President Johnson, somebody remarkd that It
looked as though Pierr Saie, the proe secretary, was
getting a buildup for Vie President because of the news pie.
htre of him and Presisat Johnsoa Ogether et or sk.
Sen. Hubi t Hmpr, who likes a joke as well as the net
man, and who also wu't sy away from the vice
duy, Imped io the teu "Yo semd M yiby Kaedy
to te Farc It" he told the Preadat. "Ym sead ahra
river to s thi Pop. Adli gets to lake Mrs Joma to
thibeatn. What I wat to hae, Mr. Ph lr, i anysbo
pO IN to help 4 a Bird register? he Pruiaft's duahr
S parn to start classes at George Washigton Univesity.

il pa for the repairs he
rhps didn't want, ad if he
did, he perhaps couldn't af-
ford, they cn put the hou
on the auei bck ad sell
it o the highest bidder-all
legal-Illl. ,
They may ~e my, if the
owner has a large family,
"you have to many child
in this house; we will buid you
anther roo for you to pay
for," when t probably has al
he can do tolfeed d clothe
and educate his children now.
To top thisral off, this orga-
nitm zn a possibly, if the
owner doesn't let them make
tMh pa mayoroyfoet
want but can't afford, burn
(excuse me, ot burn but tau)
thouw b e eam ad hum e
owner for ding the job-and
if e doesn't py for that -
take ever the lot.
i
on you think the people
uld kow bout this? They
mI wat tp put a stop te HI
A w, 1I name of he eor-
g ation that is thinking
ral ult this deal i'
Ciy of Ga"in &vile udr i
puposd housing ordiae.
ibat do you think aM
?tt Read ila pnpM ed#
an Let y umr comml
e know Lt yo think. We
ve Igboual g cde,
hles stck .th the etm
hive.
yes PllMsedonot let lt
inpectr c you sleeping
iW the htdth. This is strictly
t'a* lute the proposed

OBSERVER

One Kind Gives

fTill h Hurts'

DITOR, Su: veryday I
rad a Poewl. W 4iAdd
a gi thve at of his wa
orwealth ntq SH sa per
i at !ic
0 ;
It always as been ader
Aod umil ow. thmr ar
five jobs to e had anad s
S needed job the e

MEETING PLANNED
The choral Group of Lodge
No. 113 will meet Tuesday at
I p.m. at the hme of Charlie
Ross, of 701 SW 5th Terrace.

JONSVILLE NEWS
SPRING TRAINING
The Jonesville Dodgers will
begin spring training on Feb.
16 at 2:3 p.m. here. The Dod.
gers will be reorganized at 4:;
p.m.
At 9:30 p.m. there will be a
welcome ball. Music for this oc-
casion will be furnished by little
Johnny Ace and his band at the
Recreation Center.
For further information con-
tact the owners, The Roes Bro-
ther. Ldis Ross, coowner and
reporter.

NOTICE
The S. Marion Weeks Club of
the Mount Pleasant Methodist
Church will meet at the home
of Mrs. Mattie Bellamy, of (12
NW 6th Ave., Tuesday at 8:31
p.m. Mrs. Alin Joisn,
president
-t

SPECIAL NOTICE
All mothers of the first grad
setion of Duval Elementary
School are asked to meet at
the school today at 7:30 p.m.
in a very important meeting.
Plun be present. Mrs. T. B.
McPherson, teacher; Mrs. let-
Brown, president; Mrs. Mil-
S Smith, prtt .

LATuE METING

University City Temple No.
90, Daughter of Elks, will
meet at the Maso Hall at
p.m. today.
The "Bll" are asked to meet
in a bushes eeing at I p.m.

PLAN UNITING
The Home Miion Society of
the First Baptist Church wil
meet at the home of Mr. Ona
Mae Pyles, of 614 SW 3rd t.,
Tuesday at 7:3 p.m.

WASHIl01ON Prsident
Jot sa is m itly to eave
tl Vie NaM ifbln where
it at ist o wp d'etat Ib
November was a btrag The
M ased Ml t ak was al-
moet a jo sort of acabi-
nt shffle ith tanks and
the United SWate i be gigang
to look at ay inefficient but

Prsideat Kewly who
was a patie and vaguely
pessimistic mam, migt have
oM a asup f a nation
that mld Mt defend itself,
bat Jhson, who is neither
patient nor pMimrtic, is not
likely to go an paying t over
$1 million a day to perpetuate
a stalemate.

ACCORDINGLY, we are
prlaby canla to the end of
the period when the United
States would neither fight nor
negotiate. And we ae probe-
bly apprvmpg ag naw phase
where bol fibng a~nd nego-
tating will be stepped up.
Without a more aggressive
military strategy, the pros-
pects of a more successful dip-
lomacy are not good, but a
combination of the two might
be lnifu
The Communists in North
Viet Nam are vulnerable to
both economic and military
pressure. They have built a
light industry thee that is the
pride of their leader Ho Chi
Minh, and it has been allowed
to operate without any inter-
ference while the war has
been fought primarily in the
rice pddies and bills of
South Viet Nam.
At the same time, Ho Chi
Minh, with the diplomatic
backing of Moscow and Peip-
ing, has insisted on the "neu-
tralation" of South Viet
Nam, while insisting that the
neutralization of his own
territory in North Viet Nam is
not negotiable.
THE PROBLEM, therefore,
Is to relieve the Communists

BELOW OLYMPUS

Nam.
Man.
The objective of the United
States government in that
peninsula is cear enough.
Though Washington has
talked loosely about "winning
the war," as if nothing but un-
condltioal surrender of the
Communists tas its aim. ac-
tually it is on record as favor-
ag the "neutraoiaion" of
the whole of the country,
North Viet Nam as well
as South.
There is very little evi-
dence, however, that it has de-
voted much thought, energy
or time to negotiating such an
accommodation, or encour-
agd anybody else to do so.
President De Gaulle of
France has proposed "neu-
trality" for the whole penin-
sul and Washington has

ly Imsdendl

"Poor John Glenn. As on astronaut, you're every-
body's hero, but as o political candidate, you're a
bum to 50% of the people!"

tended to scoff at him. Why
not let him try it? He has a
mission in Hanoi the North
Vietnamese capital, and he
proposes to have a diplomatic
mission m Communist China,
whose support for any such
policy of total neutrality is
probably essential
Johnson has not been able
to dissuade De Gaulle from
entering into diplomnaic re-
latons with Peiping. but north.
ing more can be lost by en-
couraging him to prove that
his independent personal di.
plomacy can have some prac-
tical value.
Meanwhile Nikita Khrush-
chev. who professes to be in a
jovial mood these days, has
some influence with the North
Vietnamese Communists, and
he might be urged once more
to try a little "peaceful coex-
istence" in Viet Nam.
None of this, however, is
likely to have any effect so
long as the military battle
goes badly in South Viet Nam,
and there is no pressure on
North Viet Nam to reich an
accommodation.
As things now stand, the
South Vietnamese seem to
assume that the U. S. commit.
ment to help them is un-
limited. There have now been
two insurrections in three
months. This could be conta-
gious, and who knows, next
time it may be the colonels
against the generals and after
that the captams against the
colonels.
Johnson, however, is not
amused by all this. It is giving
his new administration a bad
name abroad, and outside of
keeping Henry Cabot Lodge
in Saigon, is doing him no
good politically at home.
Consequently, a policy of
sterner alternatives proba-
bly lies ahead for both the
South Vietnamese and the
North Vietnamese Instead
of neither fighting nor nepoti-
ating effectively, all partici-
pants, including the U'litcd
States, are probably going to
have to do more of both

DOMESTIC PROGRAM SHAKEN FROM WITHOUT

Of Men and Mice and Their Plans

Im rt tm
By ARTHUR MfOCK
WASINGTON-The heavy
emphasis n domestic pro-
blems and redial programs
in President Johon's first
State of the Union message on
Jan. I gave the general
assumption that he expected
no new, immediate laterna-
tional cries which would di-
vert his concentration on
pushing these programs
through Congr. If this
suumptio was sound, its
basis has now been shattered
by explosive events all
around the world.
The East-West disarma-
ment angotiatin just re-
sumed at Geneva have been
brutally interrupted by the
latest Soviet mockery of their
concept the gunfire which
destroyed a strayed unarmed
United States training plane
and killed its crew. And this
incident presages a cotinua-
tio of the sterile record of
these consultations, broken
ony by a nuclear tat-ban
treaty which already appears
to ban the use of atomic power
em for the pieatu purpo
of excavating a new, lower-
cost isthmin canal

AS FURTHER evidence
that the Geneva negotiations
are founded on an illusion -
that effective disarmament
can precede a formula for
durable world peace, which
in turn mut be preceded by
an atmosphere of mutual trust
- Moscow is making threats
that grave consequences
would follow the deployment
of U. S. military forces to re-
store peace in the Island of
Cyprus.
Governments are being
overthrown or menaced by
civil war on the continent of
Africa and its offshore islands.
The ruling junta in South Viet
Nam, whose deposition and
assassination of President
Diem and his brother followed
a public attack on the Diem
regime by the head of the U.S.
government, has been over-
thrown by another in a dubi-
ous prospect that the change
will strengthen the conduct of
the war against the Red Inva-
ders.
AND AGAIN President 8u-
karno of Indonesia is constru-
ing an agrewent promoted
by the U. S.- and hailedas
a "triph" for Attorney

General Kennedy, its inter-
mediary on his habitual un-
derstanding of these arrange-
ments heads I win, taills
you lose. His consent to a
cease-fire in Malaysia, he in-
sists, does not commit his ir-
regular partisans, the guerril-
la terrorists on the border.
The "Good Neighbor Poli-
cy" of this nation in the West-
ern Hemisphere, now fortified
by the greatest of all persua-
ders the hunrlre's of mil-
lions of dollars assigned to the
Alliance for Progress is in
a higher state of unneighborli-
ness by reason of the formal
charge of the Republic of Pa-
nama that the U.S. is an
"aggreasor" of its sovereign-
ty.
And in contrast to Cuba, the
government of Panama is not
Communist and has no ties
with the Communist world.
Yet it is Panama which has
magnified mistakes made by
this country in its relations
with that government and its
people by citing the U. S. as
the defendant in the forums of
the Organization of American
States and the United Nations.

THE POST-WAR system of
defensive Wstern alliances, of

POTOMAC FEVER

By Fletcher Kebd, Cowlem Washinton Bur

Ode to the nate's Bobby Bake: Twinkle, twinkle youthful star. Life was
gay and so bisame. In your glamour world so high, fees were't low, but all hi
fi.

Bob Kennedy's Far Eastern aide was a great success, but It may give
seoemymm im LB an idea: That maybe he a get along without U attor-
..-
Astronaut John Glenn's entry into politics isn't a bad idea, but just to
UeqU i things, shouldn't at least ne of our present senators be exiled into

rklM ode: All hail to Eiebower, often called Ike. We've no candidate
daItet Ibr't like.

L4 a Jams's thrift tIm will mer make vote with the average
pm l S be mae -SB o whiw e a I we a repe g IeadWays.
Commla's k tor Kuck back s Rokefller for president Actully, Rocky
ca'lt l Me i r bIr actd pmaidt or the grandfathers' father of
the ldt.

which NATO is the core, has
sprouted new seeds of disinte-
gration with the diplomatic
recognition of Communist
China by France. And the
structure of the system al-
ready had been weakened by
the policy of this country in
the UN that was expressed in
supporting against Portugal
and other NATO allies the
rrnrt irresponsible resolutions
of the General Assembly, pro-
vided they were affixed with
the label of "anti-colonial-
ism."
This policy led the US.
government to supply the
pressures which forced the
Netherlands to yield West
New Guinea to Sukarno's
military aggression in flat
violation of the UN charter,
to which all concerned were
signatories. And it also has
fostered the timorous theUis
that a "confrontation of the
great powers" is the certain
price of any substitution of a
strong world policy for one
of compromise in the face of
such threats as are con-tant-
ly being made by the Soviets
Sukarno & Co.

ONLY WHEN national se-
curity was in clear and im-
mediate jeopardy by the
Soviet installations of of-
fensive missiles in Cuba, 90
miles from the Florida coast
- has a threat of "confronta-
tion" been risked. And that
was perforce.
So, inthe span of a few
weeks since the President
put his heaviest accent on
domestic problems, the com.
parative quiet on the world
stage has been supplanted by
crises which have upset the
table of priorities in his first
message on the State of the
0
Johnson's Own

Philatelic Club
c) NoI Yort Tue
WASHINGTON The LBJ
brand has been stamped on a
philatelic club the LBJ
Philatelic Society of Denver,
which will now watch, and
catalog, the President's every
move.
Soon expected are stamps
with his lkenes from new
nations eager to do him this
honor,
The club wll dfer eve-
lopes o drawings happe
ins which Johneaa par-
tcipates, cacemd se day
of the event and o la e i a

WORLD'S FOREMOST NEW3 ANALYST

$6A

of this convenient situation in
which they fight the kind of
guerrilla war they prefer on
South Vietname soil., while
enoying immunity from at-
tack on their own; and in
which they refuse to negotiate
the "neutrality" of North Viet
Nam while insisting on the
"neutrality" of South Viet

amMsn a mc

M. t .ehp.m: AM ps 4I>rn m4U
We* A5U6 m '

Attack on DropOut Problem

(Bate

I

I

666

---- -

I

MO0EN

Molay, February 3, 1964

Plantation Ball Given for Junior Assembly

ill TI

F Wlmlml

About

People
Dr. and Mrs. Mark Emmel
recently returned from Puerto
Rio where they attended the
Puerto Rico Veterinary Medi-
cal Convention in San Juan.
Mrs. Emmel repressed the
national Women's Veterinary
Medical Auxiliary at the re-
quest of the president and was
gstspea at the Puerto
Rico Women's Auxiliary Lun-
cheon.
Mrs. J. R. Glover, president
of the Florida Federation of
Women's Clubs met the Em-
mels in Tampa and returned
with them to Gainesville. Mrs.
Glover and Mrs. Emmel left
immediately for JekyllIsland,
Ga.. for the Southeast
ern Council Conference of the
General Federation of Wom-
en's Clubs. This is a regional
organization of GEWC compos-
ed of 10 states.

Here to attend the funeral of
Charles C. Voyle, held Tun-
day. were the following mem-
bers of the family, many of
whom staved at the home of
Mrs. Charles C. Voyle. They
included:
0. B. Turbyfill of Chicago,
brother of Mrs. Voyle; a sister
Mrs. Renfroe Lambert, and
Rev. Lambert. Quincy, Fla.:
a sister, Mrs. Bess Patten of
Jacksonville: a niece, Mrs. A.
A. Askew and daughter, Su-
san, of Bartow: a nephew,
Arthur Sewell Jr. of Bartow;
a niece, Mrs. C. S. Bodine
and Mr. Bodine of Jackson-
ville and Mrs. J. W. Foster of
Ocala.

Boiling Point
Water that is at a hard rolling
boil cooks foods no faster than
water that is at a slow even boil.
No matter how much heat is
applied, once water is at the
boiling point it can go no higher
in temperature.

After you fit a bottom crust
into a pie plate. the pastry
should hang over the edge about
I inch: use the kitchen scissors
to cut off any stray pieces.

Miss Cathy Gammage and Rick Scarborough,
above, were among the members attending the Jun-
ior Assembly's formal "Plantation Ball," Friday
evening at the Gainesville Woman's Club. The pie.
ture at the left shows the dancers watching the
Continental band, who played for the affair. Chap-
crones for the evening were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Black, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Graves, Mr. and Mrs. Jas-
per Joiner. Dr. and Mrs. Allen Y. Delaney and Mr.
and Mrs. David Fuller.

Prof. Lewis
Is Speaker
For DKG

Prof. Hal G. Lewis, faculty
member of the University of
Florida College of education,
was guest speaker at the al
joint meeting of three chapters
of Delta Kappa Gamma Society
Saturday.

The three chapters of this
organization for teachers. Del-
ta, Alpha Rho and Alpha Sig-
ma, met for a morning pro-
gram and luncheon at the Tho-
mas Hotel.
Professor Lewis, who spoke
on the subject, "A Look at Our
Teen Age Culture," said that
two problems of teen-agers are
a loss of identity and isla-
tion from other groups in so-
ciety. The two great needs of
young people are for jobs and
marriage, the speaker believes.
Musical entertainment was
provided by Leslie Casey, Ka-
ren Casey, Rheua Stakely.
Ann Bridges, Pat Mitchell, Sha-
roe O'Steen and Marianne
Forsman.
Dr. Pauline Hilliard was pro-
gram chairman and Miss Care-
line Ferguson arranged the mus-
ical entertainment.
Mrs. D. E. States, president
af Delta Chapter, presided.

WhiteTurnips
A bunch of white turnips
should yield two cups of the
diced vegetables after cooking.

I L TT l lllll 1 1 11 1|11% s I"
SL Whimsical .
Help You Live Longer trawBags
Want to live to be 100 years correlatinbetween a highchl-e Are ort '
old and enjoy it? esterol level andheart attac'ks;I "
his seems to be a reasonable t this seems to be oe W hlW r you're a sport about
dream for young people today factor. yur iy aisaher thing.
if they take advantage of what When a ptiaet has bd but you may find ymoelf part-
is already known about healNt, h.aut attlkI the Oadie a i. th me ot f it for the
ultritio and exrcie. Evenui diet i di mre drastic.whinal nw strab handbags
th who are middle ae and t Oet I now ha ats wlch 'borrow practality from
older can probably aygthen recovered from a rim haut the s W
their life span, and most i- attack which occurred years bag is te wrong
port. the youthful portim of o word, sie these a ot hand-
it, by doing the sm. ev, the advice d his e by' A shoulder bag.
Scientists and physicians are physiin, h wife te for examteis not one but two
etremel ca ous about sayig; hir plaia mP ad pql rak ba f frod and
that anything a promv ftlmeak n a hst, a rii back, d biged atthr at
atiW the evidence is irremule. is cooled trte ias This perhaps keeps
However, moat of the Oxi pld i the rtlematsor ltl th mr uy m at se from
Itowe, and haw e tal o for the fat to hardn the topping abwan. hH e ap
1 know. and have talked Ihis i hen remoed an!d d qpi. -s for it i S a.
are their patients to cut don eCr r t
an their consumption of anil ew present imeor- U -iwet is a T. ral
fat f am to eerc reubhrb i we ould all prmboblft with a I go chai

It't pos.ble to domoge
cloth everelI it na, a.r a,
solutions ore o!lowed to plh;
On them
We uggci I'i"T likt be I
thing to do is eair an old MV.Ot.J
or houet lor O smem.nq jhcTn
you're av.vning ,ur ha r C
at the very least. protect )'-
ef with ample to*elling 1
not to *ear good thing' no a-
ter how big a hurry you're I
And if you should ipill son'
har wJving blutrtl o' a g'i'

First M,
...The ticket agent for S
C trial Airlies said today
the early moin crash
.Ued all persons aboard
the firm's first major p
.rash to his knowledge.
-- "As far as I know South
, trial had a perfect flying
More About

Air

Ibere is no radio towe
the airport and planes ar
contact with the FAA st
about weather conditions
Riobbis said although
weather was gray ad over
conditions were good for fl
Tree city fire eks sp
the scene shortly after I
and smothered the flames
foam.
Only scattered portions o
plane, including the tail
and small portioof
plane's fulage, were un

Valentine Day is o ap-
prching. This is the tme to
give valentines ad to attend
the amal Sweetheart Dance.
The smn wil be spo ing
the dame Febr y h i l
gyma as. Adinimi is U
cents sagl ad 75 com s mc
ple. During the dance, the
Sweetheart and her prince
il be ano Aed. Contestb
fo pries are from the rad-
* 74 and Sweetheart contest-
s are from the ior high.
Be me and support the coo-
ts otf your choice!
We fel that the boys of
N. should be carrying the
books of the members of the
girl's basketball team! Our
gir have cme through apia
wik a victory over Fort Whie.
Gloda ree was high saor-
er helping make the 27-17 vi-
ltory poalle.
'11 omloa staff is stlD work*

P. K. Yonge students are par-
tidpatingain "Operation 3D"d
this weekend, a program
held in the Teaching Auditori-
um at Gainvle High School
in observance of Comm nity
Youth Week. Tis was planned
by students from GHS and P.
SK. Yonge in cooperate with
the Gainesvlle Ministerial As-
socation, and its sated purpose
is "to explore the reao and
relationships of life toward
veloping a mature ad mnd
vale system." If you won un-
able to attend "Oerat 3-
D" yesterday, it's not too late-
today's session begins at I
p.m. and you're cordially In-
vitld.
The P. K. Yonge Blue Wave
basketball team defeated Mac.
denny in an exciting lame in
our gym last Tuesday night
We played Lake Butler Friday
nigt, and the Int era and An-
ehor Cube co- poso d a
dma In the gym after the
game, with a dijockey and
no admission chargell
P. K. Yonge wlll ay North
Marion another bask-
etball game this Tuesday night
and we hope to ee om real
community support. Bring the
family to the P. K. Yonge gym

blg very hard a the amul.
SThey a pmling amtheru
sas drliv oo. Amoals will
,o wt i4 of w h you may make
Ia dw payment d two dllnr
to re ve e.
TmEd Bass is the SMmt
of the Week. Terrell is the aO
of Mr. md Ml. T. J. Bas ad
is prldsit of his sWop ore
Bdal. He s a mmberof the
F.F.A. ad be Beta Cub. Tr-.
rell was quarterback of the
footll tea Now, his drt
on t he b lh team are ml-
lbeing mded, oas heh bes
high scorer ia several amS.
Cogratulatins Terell, aa
job w done.
PANTMI PATER: We ea-
tay hope the juor cai do
Parker worrin herself sck.
Does asla know the real
truth about Glen McElroy's
swollen eye?

Momy, Fdr ary 3, 1964

Berating Young Generation

Age-Old Game of Adults

SlB J bs Hept Uivenity want no change in the status convinced that their new ways'
OBy GARY IM ^"Our youth n tow loarery. ^, nd intraet of their ween rift or tb& u
Shave bd manners, .co n children who themselves I- caviced that our coun
; to our school last Tu at e mpt for authority, disrespect are finding their way through try i peopled with a younger
has Me hae etra fa aolder people. Children now- new ide. geana whoe ways are dif.
J .rs f meare tyrants. ty long Aother valid complaint s fere- andu maoubtdly better
S ad thw ra ll... dc the ne ret i rie when their elders enter that the ipblie prss ad ub- than their pret
nhl. Uril rsame old nport card therot m Th. a oy ontradict their wished periodialsg gi adlines
t wee S a e.nwgrid. w te chater bdoFer co- and freaurehe resae bl Tf ll
day Mala *A*WE.Salleand ofthe cim nc daysjpanuMe go" r e food a d ty-iusivey to Juvenile eli ents
ns sM D It a h tis yeau. We were ga d tat ,i s ni their tadeu" and crimes of their mosat oa yB
Sfrday o frev-mayca bt i Such a statement infuriatesof our yo thaort popul tion
at .d h! a m t taugeer and, pmsonany,Throughout the country the For Bloo
S tdoI' blame them. In the are hundreds of thoausnd of
fi t ae y We hav eve sm a tOe on e ,, n ,a anin.e, 0 ung peopltaki part In CeAI a Clombia (AP) -
WllWKWeinor nmos tha 4m a d and television and dthe citing prVrams a cd activities, lie eoi d to invstigate
.ledto 2Em s s M A A l fr t th gde, homethey are icessantly bom. rating new devlopinglSatrday the deaths of 1
mt wM a a hsre le Rbrt Brs M bard ith the ag d ploy of,new theories in small and large youth believed tobe victim
a Humerksi, and Fred Are "What is this younger e group. One rarely hears about of a ring which kill hoamel
y t '. he a h Fom fte eigth grade Ca- t cming to!" these because some editors say boys and ells their blood
clu ad at dlhm Ib.ot ford,&IlMam d e statement above is a dir. that this sort of activity is not hospitals.
Pia the wa o l at ..Ldl Moore. Frum e a vth ~ e quote from that ill-tempered, news. Co
*ml ah b l i t O- b hk D ol n crustlty old poophilosoper of the Recently I became interested bia at a quart.
hbT a to L, dly, D d Century B.C.- Socrates. in the NationalJuniorClal bodies of the out,
ae day ad DkiW d Mad. We Poncing nd ting the a group of high school r a fm t ,
ubP eaw its w ="a- ig ld tha t atwo more people young has been a favorite past students with 12,000 members were diovered vacant lots
didaa We illr e oi an added to thea i of A dts for hndrds achf hom is studying atin. au C the pest four
ar o t Pie h onorllt six weeks. We centuries; adults strike out like The local and state programs of months.
St ht ld p that of the ople vipers at the young Who arethis group are exciting, full of
out oft n t the A d B going to ihrit ch crea- dramatic flavor as we as indi Pole have suspected the ex
oMr.M ths efa tl t, kad ave up a ted by their eldrs. captive of a new trend among isten f the boodllig ring
f our sthantsand a r. In Baltimore's Walters Art young people today. The NJCL since lst Dember when 12-
tatve of Enflds of Jack IGBoLIUGHTS: We finally let Gallery there is a handsome annual national meeting is at- yeareM twins disappeared for
ile, presented the overhead the cat out of the cellophane gravestone carved in as-relief tended by nearly 2,0 teenagers four days, then turned up in a
auditors and the asc orie ba b about he new seven day. and painted in subdued, claiming from all over the United States. weakened condition. The twin

colors. Moving across one por. I was privileged to speak to
n oit of the gravestone is a line t e 1963 conve-

isa d they were kidnaped by
n em dramd as police officers,

Gaolmnrl Suen -

Lucy Ends Show
For Business

R

suits waLMaL 1 'hjispal will k Frank-Green
hhol of men wearing long skirts; be on and was tremendously im- piritd to i hom where there p Ir ,l""I Cbr e
low this is a line of younger pressed with their mature ati re other youths and given an
By n men wearing short skirts. The tides and activities. injection which put them to This lmee urnishe ir'a-
ANmS -UZZe S z older, conservative men wear I attempted to interest several slek mt ro of the n"" tofo
Ml-T the long skirts, but their sons editors in publishing a story liabi olmity *oci- no oj
wear the "new-angled" short about the group. None was in- Goodye Spa at poies one.
for an evening oa h and e y skirts, popular with the youth terested. One in fact, said "If
citement Cme at a:30 and Y .... of that day. one of the girls dressed as Dido WASHINGTON (AP) Good- T fully, no N S not
ctch the B-fsuad game! a a.d ARTO.N SDULAS The hieroglyphic writing states gets raped by a toga let me bye astronaut, hello politician. an ied insurance' en
Two of P. K. Y e's four that the older men are disturbed know immediately!" This i a That will be the bakround isay wieain l
Irsevice Prubshave ected; Is- .woIIsyoag r= aerhiudent Cucilrand coon th o wh your li ohftDeability limits sos omuld
Sed semester b ars. The -Wehe ed Buccaneers, what Sntt e ttoaton om e at o nforafarewell-from ace n-solute safety." lt.
ewIsad er tin ad ve to ula for the faculty- d th bl. T e committee a nd wo erig wat wileeomephed edralm whch s nr to e en astronaut John ou, y houl b
new irat executive board s A t da I o.the decorations will be: of the Egyptian nation when et the place at whioh the fury of Glenn by his friends and offih h." The extra c for
I.: Tommy s Y pr u bt tA-c t w.e daet u.on. e lp I falls into the hands of these ad young people is imed when in the Space Agency. higher limit is surriill
dent: vice president, Frank Ym beat the faltyk.Wel t.ha N U ny Colbumt, B -dl pated young people' In'they see the flamboyant, juven- h Wa tn din n al. Mn o i :
i a sarefor wsue Dd by the ld Mills, Beverly a a et ~The Washington dinner thisnal Many- our clients say
Bowls; secretary Dao I dlncld Ut ilJn Phimn Imodern times the DuIehof Well- w1 delinquent stories r pe tetTuesday will he an informal, l'I ste bi os bil a leilin
Nedsoe, and h bond f dne- ane 'lenat Deb. rdc-afai-ito tfae is 16uraitest.'onoi
Ble diosJardofi thinfacultIthelastbiton stuck out with a rapier- over and over again. irae
t: Hal Dggs, John W ieg 1ot the gamewas out of.luerl s I like tongue at the young, saying Last week Iwas Invited to a
i, and C -Rha* bows. The team says thatit The publicity committee will that he feared to think of the speak to a group of young Pell- Glen ha rgsl iafrom the Mliay we d ,isuse tirhtp
-iu-s are: Betsy M.,lla" wasn't Peroaally, Tdoaan'tbe Kay Noks and Dewey Bec.k. twapl. T heyn.oww. ho m Nan Aerouti and Spce
resident; Deb Bol wh wn. Id owWe ttoommendth S cou were placed n theirplad their daring to be differ mni to cpignn Cll o, top b ri o
Preident Debie. .Iandslent. They settled in for a longOhio for the Democratic nmi
, Vice Predent; Ann War- .tt it w a hard fought dent Cowil ad Mltrs. BandyO, needs only to read anddiussio in search of ways toinltin to the U.S. Senate. ,K I
rington, Secretary. Jea Not-* w me m both sidum for the fin work that thlisten to discover that the con-.overcome the "What is ftiMcKINNEY-
- mlctd trearer, We want to slute ald telhae don as willoi e torvative, atrophied minds of:younger generation coming "ualtakrlsTte'slAJey
ser istoria, d culty who me out andpy- .adults and their attitudesto-to"; and howtoapproachTUwt GREEN, Inc
.. ..ofan, cin e .,sicthey did a fin job. Te Buc.l.andads b a w ld ie asd a wnhod ae t adwarad against GR EN I ics
as u yo* pent to opleso Insurne b Rewl hole
UNDERTOW: Congramtui. ye, fr his o d their privileged guest the West not changed over the centuries. printing anything good about W A L K E R Insuronce & Rel Este
Slatonge's first Anchor, P. knoc out pWyi wood band director, Mr. John-I have talked with hundreds ofyomng people today. The even- i 1010 W. University A".
Yonges first Anchor B Ad- bhi. ba u a da sou. He helped the band on the youngpeople and their firsting ended with no solution to IUNITU Ph. FR 3617
miral;he was elected by the Bu chol wil lt H ill -complaint is that their elders the problem-but, these serious, iu xw ,,s. ar Pf. FR 2-3617
Anchor Club andnnou t February More detas illpleces that they will beplay- have forgotten their own youth, thinking young people were still r' w, ~
t dr r. iday nlht be given at a later date. Dutlig at their coig eoontests.

Jerry's omed P. K. Seniors
tet Tuesday... Report cards
came out Friday... ;Remem-
her to let your tickets for the
Junior play, "Visit to a Small
Planet," to be presented this
February 19th. . See you at
the North Marion basketball
game!!

Rebel

Rap Up

IMILY CAUTNIN

ml

As hs past Friday was Coo. played two extra overtimes and
ereo Day, the student finally won by a single point.
Sant F received a welcome The boys recently lost oe of
rest kfter finishing eams ad the best players on the team,
find their outcome. Report Senior Richard Clemmons.
a carme out, much to the Richard suffered a broken
coernati of the Student hand in last week's Friday
Body, Wednesday afternoon for niht game, but he is to be com-
the third time. mnded for coatiming to play

rd several minutes after the
incident occurred. He will not
e able to play for the rest of
be eason. He will be missed
not only by hi teammate, but
by his numous fan as well.
e pai I and Spanish
I Clubs have been busy, a
will continue to be until the end
This coming week, wit their
ew money-raielg project In
order to a tad for an edu-
tlooal trip to 'i Culdad de'
SAugustine, the clubs are
bng totUbbuhs. Tny are
ure of a sell-t, for Santa e
has held the hol health tro
p ay lor aat two years. Any
one who is interested in pu-
chag their toothbrush before
the supply runs out shou con-
tat the 9Spah Diepr bent
Out f f or codulg cantd
tM A*y D i r ha bee
c b sm As stt Drum Maj-
er. bbSd to weeks ago, he
is e mdaroing p ul tnig
IwO the I-m d Band Mmi
ter Ray anceford and wit
e aid of Drum Majr
Geore P Wlip.

only 163 w Atill n the lly when the
field truggled into Monaco-but they
included ll eiht of the qciu
Teiniht-ou- ihtr eordwuse pw -
haps man r a than the fact
that, dit a handicap formula that
favored the mallbt Ma. a alcon ap-
tuw second plae ova On ar ne
ham Iluck ... but dgt have to have
Im~lf Became the Rallye
aevy nriry ty twwr Z ad
ti n ti ontiat cm pro-
vide, and bemse it wind up oB the
m rota bwbyi nH the Ftb eh
Maritime A k is a Wi test of
authteer'w i a s.taleriagbhad
tobebwflbu mmable w a 1.000
foot drp. TIhese bul wV-.I had to

by a Valiant wa 88th overall. Falon
d invaluable experience in how to
build a car better, make it tougher,
sharpen up it total perf'/rmanc. That '
the real maon Ford is interested n
open comptition-and why Ford-built
an have got s much more to show
drivers. Drive one and see; it won't
have mi lights or a horn you san bear
for four mia in stormy weather, t
the other special rally equipmant-
but it'l amurprei you!
TRY TOTAL PERFORMANCE
FOR A CHANGE

NEW YORK (AP) Lucille
Ball has decided to drop her
popular television comedy se-
ries, "The Lucy Show," at the
end of this season.
Mis Ball said that she want-
ed to devote more time to the
affairs of Desilu, the Hollywood
production company of which
she is president, and that she
found it impossible tojo both

Schultz Leads Tennessee
By JOE RALBS tEI N its great play in losing to.from Duke coach Vie Bubas
Sa SpOt Es sr Kentucky by only five points, for a 3-point showing against
Florida's Gators, a basket-clash with Tennessee, a quin the Blue Devils recently in a
iall team somewhat more co-ltet whose royal rainments are game Tennessee lost in twin
vercd with glory because ofia bit tattered because of a overtime. Schultz is near 18
... .surprise loss to Georgia, at points a game.
CO 1 8 Alough there is contrast Tennessee has plenty to go
Siin the manner the two teams with Schultz. A. W. Davis is
I B A B attle aturday night, the factdone of the team's leading
remains both were defeated m scorers. He's a thi one at
ital Southeastern Conference 7, 15 pounds, but is a great
a W este-i. gmes, outside shot and good rebon-
But the Vols, coached by der. Davis also is hitting 18

'Lincoln Tops

Invitational

Cage Event
LAKE CITY Linculn Hlili
:School of Gamnesulle lived uL
to its top seeding in tne aniudLI
invtational cage meet here tO
downing Richardson High 59-.9.
Saturday night to cop the cro n
It %as. the 12th wiMI n 14
:games tur the Terrieri 'n fl
the top quinttet in Negril Ia
in the state this seasul

c
T
1

s S ?Iy 117 A5SOCIATED PRESS IMears, former Wittenb gper game. FI .t
Y Z e Ohio, mentor, went to Georgial A man to watch tonight will
A Hollywood script wn terh ;be Howard Bayne, 65, 2530
,reaio't have improved n Sun- Ipounder. He's the muscle man
day afternonn' aNational Bas-. T EAM n e EOinh provide key m
tketball Association dramatics. t a 1, st. key baskets aprovidi key debas, F
flVj8 F iSt. S key baskets and key deen-
The day's threat te abes vauW e of e x mno sive plays when the Vols need
promised plenty of action b re E. T'ar .n as7 in. them. When Bayne became 3
Opened, watching conenders 3 eligibleb, the aols caught fire.
c1iThe league's Eastern and s ar 60 a uic.a Without him Tennessee was 3-2.
S77 ,. At.t. i n7 a0 lau 7
Western divisions In position. (eAm, a ui im, With him they were 82 prior toI R
play When the final curtain vmi o te los t o gia. THEY'RE FROM TENNESSEE
in MI.n 53 7Gergial.thll t o, trG i.
ell nobody was disappointed. uIr l. ta rt. sea. s Sid Elliott, 6-7 senior, will Sid Elliott. left; and Danny Schultz: (Coach Ray
The east came up with elimac 5 Aa be at cnt. H's stady and Mears in back.
irewors in each episode. s x.- e 7 s experienced. The fifth starter
The plot went something like ca. Tr t likely will be Larry Mcentosh,
this ;W-1., W.), -I, at guard.
stTi gRupp Can Collect
Act I. Scene: St. Louis-The;'-- l .' eme Tonight's game may be in
Pi ou"p Fl. Kfil ngh game may be in:
tflawkst, poits edown late ln r a s,, e, sharp contrast to Saturday's.
the first half, overtake crThe Vols like to slow it dow No, 700 Tonight
Los Angeles in the third period, I play ball control and a sw iteh
BIG FOURSOME FOR VOLS !drop behind again, then come conference leader with a -l ing zone, ae press or sliding
Left to right. Bob Hosiett. 6.8; A. W.. DaviS 6-7; Wack' a se ond time to win, rer Now, a2 is on th man-to-man res
Elliott again. 6-7; and Howard Bayne. 6-6. !i0-10, and drop the Lakersverge of extinction in the 6l4~l The Gators, who got a peak By BOB GREEN (Vanderbilt put its high standing
- --- -- 'ltrom first to thurd in the West. ace. Tonight's game su effort against Kentucky, wilAs slated Pres Sports Writerin jeopardy with ain 81-63 dteate
:c T* gm is Th e.fthoee a an s P t entuk 6s,e rtro
Ti Act II. Scene: Baltimore--San MUST for Tennessee. come right back with Dick Adolph Rupp doesn't muchlby Auburn. Michigan. 13i1
Srancisco, foced into overtime Can Be A Spoiler Peek and Dick Tomlinson atlcare for cramped old Woodruff romped over Michigan State
J a co b s in n e r bv art $'I Baltimore BulksinThe shoon to The B G i I
S t.W by an 8.1 Baltimore Bullets: The Gators, on the otherforwards, Mnt Highley, cen.Hall Athens, Ga. Never did. 95-79.
Sclosiig burst, fires back in the hand, are 3-3 and can as- ter; and Brooks Henderson and At least not smce Feb. 13. 1931. Davidson and DePaul were thn
n t b extra period for a 120-118 vic- nsue the role of 'spoiler" for Tom Baxley, guards. That's the day he lost his first only other member of the elte
A l P a lm S n righe i tory and grabs the Western the remainder of the camp- Highey Led Way game as head coach of the Ken-t stumble last week. Daido
SP Sp J Ig s lead. three percentage points align. It will take at least two It was a season ago in the ltucky basketball team. It was at iNo. 3, was edged bt' West Vir-
S ahead of St. Louis and a half- Imo losses for such teams asTennessee game that Highley Woodruff Hall. And home-stand ginia 75-73 before rebounding
pAIL SPRINGS Calif. (API after they finished the regula.- game up on Lo Angeles. Kentucky. Vanderbilt andwon his way into the Gators' ing Georgia, then as now, was a against VMI 129-91 Saturday.
-Tommy Jacobs is getting a lit- ton 90 holes in 353 strokes eack, Actf. Scene Bosto-Oascar!Georgia Tech the rest of the startmg array. He scored 17 pensive club. Georgia won,DePaul. No. 9. lost l Lou lle
tie bolder and Jimmy Demaret seven under par. Robertson scres 48 points andiway and a string of wins bypoints and collared 2 re. 25-16. 83-79 Saturda\.
Is getting a little older. Which is: Jacobs, who has a home atJerry: Lucas flips in a pair of the UF to allow the Gators toebounds as the Gators beat! Chances are that the score' It was the first loss for each
not o a a rhyme but a reason ,nearb Bermuda Dunes Countr, free throws with I seconds left;figure. Tennessee for the first timewdll be higher than that tonight and left only top-ranked UCLA
hi o000 Palm Springs Gola Club, won te f wth in another overtime thriller ast Tennessee brings to townever at Knoxille, 873. The when Rupp again takes hs major college unbeaten.
Classic turned outPinwon the putt for a par eCinci t ra t i ips the Celtics, 119-personnel called by UF coachgators likely will need a re-Wildcats into Woodruff Hall-UCLA, now 17-0. rolled along
did. unturned out the way it inc h u fole ret,117, da cuts Boston's EasterolNorman Sloan as "superior tolpeat of that performance to he once vowed he never would with two victories over Califor-
Jacobs wo it, beating De- whose drive left hi about mgin to three anes. Ktucky's." And the Wildcatstame the Mears-men. again-but it's likely to be a nia Santa Barbara, 107-76 and
m on the second hole of a feet to the left of the green.was pt a splendid team on the A pair of Vol reserves who test of Georgia's defense.
sudden death playoff Sunday lying three when Jacobs holedI.. .t (floor against the Gators. should see much action tonight Rupp will be seeking his 700h I other Saturday games I-
out. P ,X1 .s a For sure the Vols will show are Bobby Hogsett, 64 center; victory as the Kentucky coach evolving the top ten, No 6 Vii-
-- T... ed tP ... m u h .at2 wI off the SEC's No. 1 guard. He'sand Pat Robinette, 62 guard. the Wilcs a fourth lanova took high-scoring Detroit
McNeelev Faces Thlt ended a tuament atta tl w, e t Danny Schultz, a six-foot sen- Both have played every game in the nation, will be gunning for7970 No. 7 Wichita blasted
I produ ced so many tie someone ia i .N L ior who is a dribbling derv-to date. the Southeastern Conference q e 10063 and Chicag
J o es ill n ll suggested itshoud be. ren m* A T la ish, a shooting fool and an The Baby Gators will carry lead. They share the spot with Loyola, bouncing back after dip-
hue Wemeup y Open. as r6a Thee shr the spot with b
SCe WAem y Ppen S. 2 .s excellent playmaker. He has to!their 6-3 record into a 5:45 idle Louisiana State, each at 5-2. ping to No 10, beat Iowa 8571
By cNeE ASSOCIATD PRESS There was a tie after every a I be contained if Florida hopes/prelim tonight against StiGeorgia, currently one of the SE LPe Wi L Pt
iaeNeeleo.u the bio bnral round. It was Charle SIord lua Phln l p M a ilt towin. Leo Junior College. honest teams in the league, is Ml 2 ; 2 f2
er r Arlington, Mass.. who'and Jacobs after the firstnt rmdc,,. NewYom,1. t3,2uck1 2 WI,1
Arling Mass. hoand Jacos ater the first round. el Schultz wa voted the out- Tonight's game will be Froe- 42 eet &,
sarpnsidered all washed upiSiford and Doug Sanders after d. u. alat I standing player in the VPI rida's last home fray until! "Wee hd te C.a Ten e, I a l *4
not l long ago. gets another second round and Sifford Mi sas n a tou lt comes here on Feb he defense aas
l l 119. ;lo i7lr (t tourney-won by the Vols-inaVahderbilt comes here on Feb.,along." gia Coach Red oR ey -3d be 1 a f.
crack at th"e i ,--- aong,".Georgi Coach edLORIDA o 3 3 5 3C
crak at the big time ten i and Bob Charles after the hhird i r.. s tial re III ( December. He also won raves 2. L n s only our sh
St 147 t m. AngM l" s I I Law so n said. "if only our shoo t. Au -+ ... .I . a 7 133
when be meets heavyweight4roWint fM Casper and Chlck A--- 1 -I MLa3 42biI.a8
NeCork Colseum. 'the fifth round and Jacoand's M ike H leaailwood
tstrapping *year-old Demaretl, of course, were tied 4tl WUT eneoLtofthitlague7. AU LW .
mmyotball tackle is a 2-1 an- at 1 ur e lead 79-67. Kentucky, at the
defto the second-ra t ned con- after 90 hol e. I adsame time, beat Florida 77-72,
W-jxler. purse. DeMaret, who playsOniy n15-2. It was the Wildcats' fifth
eele. a pounder, was five or sx touameayearD ayto a 'Cycle Race stra in the league after two
tt ght with then champion Charles and Don January fin A ONA BEACH (AP) The one hour mrk surpassedrecord automatically since t he game is one of three in-
FloydPatterson on Dec4. 4.1961ishd in a third-place tbdat l,; T9 yr old atos are ready 1a957 mark of 141.37 by Bob3.1-mile championship course evolving nationally ranked teams'
He'll: proved considerably and one shot behind D ema at and lforu g bMut Wyearold me -Ielntire of England at Monza,'was new for the smaller engine tonight. The others have second-
lnow I a N3-6 record, inchding Jacobs, sad $t $, ea tvea lse ame for setting rec-Italy. cycles, ranked Michigan at Ohio State
22 tikfouts. He is not ranked. Courtney ad Bob Gol a w ere HRe dwilood made 11 records in Anderson, defending world in an important Big Ten strug- L A W N
Jones is risking two possibleanother strike back mad picked Atleast thatlihow Mike Ha 12stops on the world circuit lastehamp in 5 and 15 cc divisions gle and No. 5 Vanderbilt at Ala-
luc iie fights. an outdoor show:up $2,450 apiece. wo England approached year. won in those classes on Satur bama
kolm against Pattersonsituation when he took a pair of I e 2-year-old Englishma Is day, riding Japanese Mae S- Kentucky and Michigan won e
and am with champinStPton wny:*t reasoned .Italian madelplaming to switch to four wheels zukis. :their only games last week, but
List ih mpon Snn Symank Joins Ja D r- Iy. a ufhalangm ay 0 doh mI.t h fn Ie S service
Hi record is 22-4-1, including' Tulane Staff SY S a. Dwa C tim, Feb. 16.MAY
16 ionkouts. He n nf 3Staf f;Hailwoodsol.dbe may team with :A L C. MA
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- 711- WoePh me Unit d Pipr of EnglSnd in a s nd I
ad 16 on ateeVshnsoMV Au.- Ferrari.
Local Fives lane hired former p 'rue i c I In the mo Ecycle weekend, JACK C. MAY Pre-Season Special Low
football star John to cycai at a reod of 11111.10'
Noc football star Jo. Symank a u ,m hour which established Daytona In- Money and be Ready f
oCcl Toimm urday for its co'Baing d OtW other ternational Speedway as a y new a vantage of this SPECI
soCach Tomy oy sid' his other wcol, th e -114104111
Boys' Club Junior and Inter- Syma 21u, would w m p e four cy i* machine a theph e world d n glheadle TARY MOWER TUNI
mediate teams won. from Or-Imarily with the defensive backli se built BSIr fM r H-Sd no e e land neh N e
land. in state loop games field. He replaces Georg Mci'il od sped rotd the lwo.od In the circle of m
Saturday. Kiiney, who rMent' resige d m high bIank ater tr ack8 p
eJuniors scored, 34-24. as Symank played rh e times aed set a e eour world Shepherd drove an M,mae
Tommy Dulaney hit 16 pointsLouis Cardina s ast eason ani record of 144.2 mes an bhou last Germany to first in a

e local high school foot
ball players have been named to
the honrablemention t of
Coach and Atete mgaine's
S U A-America foobal te
it learned yesterday.
P.K Yage's George Soley,
I guard; and Galeuvlle High
School's Jay Wilson, alo a
gud; and halfback Freddie
Hedea were among 16 Sun-

Coach and Atlektma
picked 7 players for t United
States AllAmerica ad only ne
Florida ier made the ranks.
He is quarterback Bobby Downs
of Winter Haven.
Soley's honor fowed that of
first team little Al-State. Wl-
so previously made AllState,

By JACK HAND
As tad Press Spots Wr er
NEW YORK (AP)-he spit-
ball i legal in the Hall of Fame
even if it is out of bounds in
organized baseba B g
Grimes and Urban (Red)
Faber, two of the last pitchers
to throw the sitter legally,
were among the six new men-
ber named Sunday te Hall
of Fame veterans' committee.
Mller Hugi the little man
wh manager the New York
Yankees to six pennants in 12
years, and He e Manush, the
powerful outfielder with a life
time .330 batting average, also
made be grade along with two
from the pre-I0 era-Job
Montgomery Ward and Thi
Keefe. Grimes, Faber and
Mash are alive.
In sme ways Ward was the
mot remarkable of the group.
A jack-oftll-trades as a player,
Wad uhJ d 1S l t

the veterans' comitte from
players who had been retired at
least years.
Grimes, 70, and Faber, 75,
were among the group df four
pitchers permitted to continue
use of the spitter after it was
legislated off the book. Grimes
actually was the last He was
active until 14, retiring with
a 2 21 won t record. Al-
though he finished up with th
Yankees, Grimes earned an but
one of his victories in the Na-
tional league at Pittsburgh,
Brooklyn, New York, Boston,
St. Louis and Chicago. He lives
in Trenton, Mo.
Faber, who works for the

Roy Mundorff
Speaker For
Tipoff Club
Roy Mundorff, director of

Ward Wal lM e ,On hMa it Wbasketball officials for thee
collect more than 2,000 hits, southeast Coe will
,151, and also to win more than pek at the bl-weekly Gaines
100 pmes, 18, as a pitcher.,v. Tipoff Club meeting to
Ward, active from 1M to 18 4Lm ow nigt. the event will
managed three club ted start at :0 p.m. at the Holiday
president of the Boston Braves, nn
pitched a perfect game for Mundorff regulates the as-
Providence in 10, organic ignment of officials for SEC
the Players' Brotherhood and basketball games ad handes
also was the lawyer for he gradin of the men in the
National league. striped sts. He watches a
Sets Reerd basketball game somewhere in
Ward also set a record of 2 the league almost every night.
assists for a second baseman A question-and-answer period
that still is in the book. will follow Mundorff's talk. It is
The addition of the six new expected Tipoff Club members
men boosted the teal member-will avail themselves of the op
ship in the Cooperstown, N.Y., portunity to query Mundorff as
museum to an even 100. Theto policies of the SEC in basket-
new members are picked bylbal.

Cook County igway depart-
ment iA Ccago, pnt his en-
tire career from 1114 to 1
with t White SS for whom
he wo23 ,games' and lot 211.
Alti hgh fluggi was a sec-
eod baemi n at Gininnati and
St. Lo from 19m to 16 it
was asa nianage that he was
voted into the Hll of Fame.
After five years at St. Louis he
took ovrr the Yanks in 1918 and
managed them autil his death
at the ge fa 50 in 199.
I l. Hi ttl
Manib, ,62, played in the
majors 'from 13 to 1W and
spent most of his career in the
Americn league with Detroit
SLt Io Wshiton and Bos
ton. He finished ul with Brook-
lyn and Pittsburg in the Na-
tional and later managed in the
minors, counted and coached. In
1S he 'won the tting tie at
Detroit with a .37 average.
Keefe, winner ol 34 games
from 100 to 1S has been
topped by only si pitchers in
the history of the game. In 188
he won 42 for the New York
Giants ld in 18M he won 19
straight, a mark tater tied by
Rube Marquard of ew York in
1912.

Miani High
New Lerder
In Cage PoU
MAMI AP) Miami High
ranked today a Florida's No. 1
high school basketball team
Coach Vince Schaefer's Stin-
garees dged past St. Peters-
burg High and Tampa Hilsbor-
ough to the top position in the
Miami Herald's weekly poll of
coaches, and sportswriters.
Miami received only three
first-place votes but gathered
165 pots. St. Petersburg was
second ith 16 points, one point
ahead of Hitisborodgh, the lead-
er last week, which lost its No.
1 ranking after an 82-76 loss to
Tampa Robinson.
Hillsborough's loss left only
Riviera Beach unbeaten among
the state's ranking teams. Rivi-
era added three more victories
to its 154 record last week and
retained its grip on fourth place
with 12 points.
Cocoa, former leader in the
poll along with Hillsborough and
St Petersburg, moved into fifth
place with an 18-2 record.

Grid Star
Florida has signed oe the
most sought after backs in the
South but i still is uncertain
the bidder will play football
the Gators.
Coach Ray Graves an-
nounced that Tom Hungerbub.
hr, 5-11, 178lp found speedster
from North Miami High School,
has d a grant-iid with
Florida.
Hungertuhler, a tremend-
oas open field runner and pass
receiver, still b interested in a
bid from a service academy,
Army. If he accepts the West
point offer, it win take prece-
dence over the UF grant.
Grave alo announced that
tackle Don Giordano, 64,210
pounds, from Mii Achbishop
Curey, has signed with Florida.
Giordano can play either tackle
or guard.
ie two signing bring to 3
the list of football players re-
cruied by orida.

Coaches Vote

To Rotate

Track Meets

ORLANDO (AP) -
coaches voted Saturday
the Florida High School
ties Association to rotate
statewide track meets b
Gainesville and Miumi.
Thl meet, held in Ms
been at the University o
ida for years. Seventy
asked that the meet be
Miami, probably at the
Junior College track, eve
old year.
The executive commit
the Florida High School
ties Association will vote
suggestion at its annual r
net August.
High school coaches al
gested the FHSAA add i
C track meet to the agenda
rently there are only me
Class AA, A and B scoo

the new Golf ad Country Club.
Frances Mason was runerup
Consolation laurels went to Lou
Bell while Gwen Dulaney took
ten Eight honors.
Qualifying for the McKenzie
charter member event is to con-
tinue through tomorrow.
Shirley Shafer won the conso-
lation tourney in December. A
previous story errneouly listed
another winner.

SHIPMENT
of 196 ps
Iambi..s & Jeeps

Track
toask
Activi-
annual
between
ty, has

By TED SMIS
INNSBRUCK, Austria (AP)-
Plucky Jean Saubert of Lake-
view, Ore., added a silver medal
to her earlier browse with a
lashing run in the wm 's gi-
ant slalom ski race and young
Yank figure sates got off to
a strong start Monday in the
United States' brightest day in
the ninth Winter Olympic
Games.
Miss Saubert, -year-o Ore.
gon State coed, broke the monop.
oly of France's brilliant Alpine
sister team by tying Christine
Goitschel for second a frac-
tion of a second behind Cris-
tine's sister, Marie theold
medalist
The winning time was 1 mi-
ute, 52.24 second Jn and
pristine did 1:53.11.
Jean's two medals are the

only os collected so far by the the bob run, carefully con-,place. Each received a A
U.S. team. 1e Soviet Union, n structed of blocks of ice, was medal.
the other hand, is making a streaming water.
team runaway of the Games, Six of the Russian medals are Another ice queen, 22-year-
with a total of 15- six gold fivegold, and four of them are in the ouke Dijksta of Holl,
silver and four bronze. hands of one competitor. Nobodyadded the Olympic gold medal
ever as wn four gold medals for figure skating Sunday night
at the Winter Olympics before. to the two world crowns she won
INNSBRUCK, Ausria (AP)- in 1962 and 1963.
The Winter Olympics are half f pr Sl nHt f r
W ir Olpi c s The hlW owner is a dimpled Regine Heitzer of Austria was
way throu today, and teRus- 1blon d d s kater yearpo second, barely ahead of Petra
sans alre have collected 14 b 'Burk of Canada.
medals while the Unied Statesanaa.
has only moe-anid Wit'r She completed her feat Sun. Eer Maentyrnata, year-old
Aide from speculation about day by ing te 3,000-meters Finnish customs officials from
ow many more medals t race after being victories at above the artic circle, earlier
R a might win, the big the other three distances. Be capturedhis second cross-con.
asn da cause df te the w, water squirt- try skiing gold medal. He took
w toda y nd s ice wndtr teed from her blades as she the 15 kilometers after previous.
next aix days. A warm south skated ros the s ly winning the 30 kilometers.
i d l the F oeh inate Valentin Stenia, Lidia's His victory brought Finland's
Mip o heoa e taw' tohe tea ate, and P Haw of total of medals to five, second
Alps-broug a th North Ko shared second only to Russia.
101i.nir ar S..ida .

valuj uia a.M0u M .
Sw wn mushy icewet an

Foreign Runners

Top Boston Meet

BOSTON (AP)-If the Boton Carroll, a native of Ireland,
A. A. Games is anyindcton, t ra a brilliant 1:4.7 anchor

could be a painful autumn in
Tokyo for the United States.
The met's recordetting per-
formers-Wendell Mottey, Noel
Carroll and Tom Oliordan -
will bear the colors of their
lands to the 196 Olympics.
Caadian middle distance ace
Bill Crothers, a heavy favorite

half-mile and psd Villanova
to an all-time indoor two-mile
relay mark of 7:.t The pre1
vious accepted standard by
Kansas was 7:30..
Irishman O'Riordan lowered
the meet two-mile mark to 8:48.-
Sas he warded off again Pete
McArdle in a fine race.

Is the space in the attic of your home going to waste
In so many homes a disappearing tair will enable
this space to be used for comfortable sleeping, plus
valuable storage. Let us quote without obligation.
Remember, it can be done'with NO MONEY DOWN
and a long time to pay. Call us today, please.
"LET US SERVE YOU TOO"

f Flor. in the 1,000, disappointed the Jones won his 0th straight In-
oaches crowd when foul weather re- door hurdles victory, then said
held in vented his appearance at Bosthis was his lastyear.
i Dad to Garden Saturday night .
Dw det arde Saturday night "Running used to be fu," he
ry sec- And the old reliable amongsaid. "Now it's a chore. Now I
American citizens, hurdler have to push myself."
Itte o Hayes Jones, announced his re-
Activi- tiremnt right after the Olym- Olympian John Thomas con-
on the pics whetherr I make the team ned his peTokyo buildup
eeti r not. with a high jump victory at 7-2.
He no has 110 competitive
so sug- Mottley, Yale captain from leaps of seven feet or higher.
a Class Port au Spain, Trinidd, ranthe
da. Cur- fastest quarter mile ever indoors
ets for with a 4.0 clocking which
Is. eclipsed the 22-year-old former SKILLED HANDS
standard of .2. The man voted
d the outstanding athlete in the SPECIAL TOOLS
meethad run-andwon-a GENUINE GM Pi
S yard race in a dual meet against G
Y Dartmouth only a fewhours
e Jan-earlir.
tourney i
roup at G S C g
F = 11 -

j

1
1

1

|

1, ,

'

I

* da..v~a a.. ...g, *IM.S*J e"all

- .DEAR ABBY: We're a bach gys in Vietnam doing a
-job for Uncle Sam, and we rad your colum in the Stars and
-Stripes. at 1year-old kid who w u ppy becau she
didn't have a bedm of her own, didn't get the telephone
calls she wanted ad wasn't as weDdressed as some of the
-other kids, sure has a lot to learn. Do you know what happi-
-nss is for the kids here?
SHappess is having enough to eat so wen you go to dee
at night your stomach doesn't ache. Happiness is having
:shoes on yaor feet and any kind o nothing to keep the eo
ut Happiness is having a roof over your head. Happies is
-the hope that maybe yoau' be ucky tough to get some ki
eo an education. Happiness is believing that the dream f free
-dem, brotherhood and peace for all mankind will somday
come true.
MORE, CLIFF, WHITEY AND GUS
*
SDEAR ABBY: What is a mother supposed to y when her
-mo age 13 brings a schoolmate home with him after school
-to "study," but they fool around in the yard a while, go into
-his bedroom and make a few phone calls, and then at about
5:45 when she is setting the table, he says to her, right out
-had so his friend can hear, "Mom, can Bruce stay for a
.per? Well study afterwards."
THE MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER: SLe is supposed uay. "Yes, dear." (Aad
she a ly dme.)

DEAR ABBY: Have you ever been kissed by someone who
doesn't wear dentures? It's nothing! My husband (Ill call him
Popeye) had all his teeth extracted years ago, but be reuses

to wear his pltes. I say if he really wants to, he can keep
trying until they fit, but it doesn't do any good. My husband
reads your colmn and thMnks you're great. Am I right to fed
hurt?
1 POPEYE'S WIFE

DEAR WIFE: ALL dtares ca e itted properly, if me
will ely give e t de bt a chtce. Tel "Pepeye" the et
tie be wes to iss ye he ll have It catch y k the
deat's office,
I
DEAR ABBY: I m a newspaper compoitor and your column
comes to my attention frequently. I agree with your advice-
most of the time. An exception being your reply to the man
whose name was erroneoly included with the list of employ-
ees, who though uninvited to the wedding, gave the boss'
daughter a git. His reason for not conforming were valid,
and his name would have been added purposely either to make
him conform: become a conspicuous nonconformist in the
eyes of his bsAs; or live a lie among his associates. Your
reply dictates that be should allow himself to be tickled into
donating to something he believes to be incorrect or to expose
himself to a potentially vindictive superior. I feel he should be
defended and oommended-let the one who added his name to
the list kick hi with the five bucks.
STED FARABEE
DEAR MR. ARABEE: I don't knew fr which newspaper
you work, utthey are lcky. Alhu g I gave a great deal
of though to my reply, I mut aduit I missed the beat Yo.
answer was bqtte, sad I tbuk yo.

Lynley, ohn Huston and
Romy Schneider, who
star.
0 Andy rMfi
Mayberry has only one
squad car so Barney buys
a World War I vintage;
motorcycle for patrol!
work.
*OSg Alag-Sougs
SWhat a the W'ard?
* U Nq Weather,
Sports i
* (C"rt News,
Weather, Spis
S Movie'
"Accent in Youth." writ-:
ing a pla about a May-.
December romance, the
author finds himself in the
-same situation. Sylvia
Sidney, Herbert Marshall.
Sm Joany Carso

.$Many people are terribly diy.ischool children in the Panama American citizen have gone
tressed over the problem of the'canal Zone want the America, even lurther and suggested that
Panama Canal. Because the flag to fly a e, it has been P cana
Panamanians want their flag suggested that we build a n..w fil the Pana Canal
It flv with the American fla canal Ml sumX so the Panaanians
and because the American igh Some of the more indigantc't use it once we leave.

MLESd

11. nydda
Jlom
4I .~Cmsle

sadsa
lbaay

lilkadof
-14. Dade
k alvahs

Go

19S. *A

at

[ 3003
Cmoa G
DOG DO T 3m

(Sdmes to Is n Pnse

DOWN

3.WuWfr
wd
p3.

**

kae"
6. ANadf

pasi
3U. hI

S.There is a lot to be said for
building a new canal to spite
the Panamanian. After all, if
it weren't for us they wouldn't
have anything o fly flag
over, md it's abut time we al-
lowed high sool students
to mnae fei paey abroad.
be question is ime we
ma bhid it It bm been g-
gsted hatwe bid the new
canal to Nicarag a.
As everyone ows, Nicara
g is a very peacil country
and they would be delighted to
hav: build a ca l there
without insiing the Pan-
muai fl's 4 flIg over il
'Ie m dd be satm led jO
q w"uld be a*s-*
to have the Nkura fla
fly imTal l e" i Md solve

the Western hemisphere. Of!
course they would insist on fly-
ing the Frenchflag over the
canal while they were digging,
but we could persuade the
American high school studeI jf
that it was only a temporary
measure. i
All right, so it's now agreed'
upon. We will finance the ca
nal in Nicaragu proidi the
Frencd dig ce the analis
Iblt, we wIl work out a soe
o either sieof it which we
wl call the Naragua Caal
Zon. This m oe rwl be .
strictly to Americansu asd w
vants working for t fa

Te e will pay te Nica
Sragons w ork n the a
oal a hlary ncoesaraw wi
their a living tadard, ad
te Asawll be pad a
a mae qual to what te
would mO ke in the aUned
IMILs

To quality for this special rate Family Want Ads will"
Offer onlv a single item, or related items (i.e.: Couch and Chair);
start with the item offered for sale or purchase; state the sale or
purchase price of each item; contain the phone number or ad-
dress at which items may be bought or sold; appear in the ap
propriate classifications;
Have all words spelled in full except for abbreviations used in
every-day writing. (ie: St., Street; Ave., Avenue, Fla., Florida,
etc.)
Allowances for error in Family Want Ads will be made when error

is reported on the first publication day of the ad. Allowance will

consist of extension of publishing days to equal the days on which
errors of material importance to the meaning of the ad and attrib-
utoble to the Sun were published.

You'll find siekers with the above meoae on all furnaces In
new '64 horses in Highland Court Manor-nother in a long
list of significant imp mes being mode continuously by
Kirkpotck ad Pielon.
What it mea, of course is that all new '64 homes hov fur-
noe whic wiN accamodate a central oir-condiioning unit
fa yr ur added comfort in the summer. wM about it todoy-it
can be instlled at any time.
* Over 20 Modes, red Fm
12,00 to $17,250
* VAand FHA Appeed
* FrIs MmakOiMp in bdisive,
..id. arkts swim aClub

By: RID POOLEI
Uenitver ly d ofm WI-
Fculty artist, Wilrd bai,
wia Pen a soloao coa-
emrt on Tuedey evening, Feb
uary 4, at 1:15, i the Uk-
versity Auditorium. Bra*k has
en virtually an ideal p-
gram, devoting the first hal to
the Partita in B-flat major by
Johann Sebastin Bac and the
late Sonata, Opus ll, by BeI-
thoven. Following the oitebal
soe, be will offer the ite
anantic "Moments musica,
Opus M" by Fra Schubert.
These will be followed by Ni
Pieces for Piano composed in
1M by the American oa po
er, George Balch Wlso. 7The
program then does with the
Fantaisie in F minor, Opus 41,
by Frederic Capin.
Brask Joied the faculty of
the University of Florida De-
partment of Made in sept
her, 18M, as Assistant Proli
sor of Music. He formerly hem
leaching positions at Newberry
College in Newberry, South Ca-
rolin; Ithaca College in Ithaca,
New York; and at the Univer.
sity of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
In addition to his experiece
as a solo recitalist, soloist with
orchestra and as a chamber
music performer, he has also
served as conductor, arranger,
and accompanist with television
films in New York City, the Ra-
dio City Music Hall, and the
touring company of the Holly-
wood eIce Revue.
Tuesday's cone-rt'is free and
everyone is cordially invited to
attend.
Cavalcade of M iM
The NORAD, for North Amer.
Jean Air D e f e n se Command,
"Cavalcade of Music," an in-
ternational and inter service
musical group, will offer a con-
cert, including both tradition-
al band music and popular se-
lections in the big band style"
of presentation, in the Univer-
sity Auditorhim this afternoon
at 3 p.m. Sponsored Jointly by
the University of Florida Air
Force ROTC and the Depart-

es University of F loria
phony Orchestra, with
ward Troupin mcoduting d
Sarah Traverse as sorano s
st, will present a concert
the University Anditorn$
Wednesday, Feb. 12, at 8:15
Mi Tram rse win sing sever
operatic arias from Moas ,
Charpetier, and Gounod,
Troupin will also conduct a D
vertmento for Orchestra by Ur-
iversity of Florida Humaniti
professo, Didier Graeffe, aOi
the "Reformation" Symiphony
Felix Medelssoh
Lyeeum Cmd
The University of Florida L).
ceum Council offers three 4-
tractions during the festival. n
iursday, Feb. 13, the Chicao
Opera Ballet, under the artisqe
direction of Ruth Page, will be
see in the University Audi-
um in choreographed versior4
of Carmen," and 'The Mer-
Widow," and an abstract bat
entitled "'Divertissment."
dancing stars include Patricwa

7 Ag. Service Officers

.Shift toUF FromTaUey
Seven members of the lor- chairmen Frank Perry, Ky-
da Agricultural Extension Ser- neth McMulen and Bill Pl
vice have moved their bas of coordlesating home economics
operations from Florida State with agriculture. Dr. Watko
University, TaBlahasee to aid that emphasis this ya
the University of Florida ca- will be on adjusting and straw
pus. thening Extension programs
Dr. M. 0. Watkis, Exten- for the overall development of
sion Service director, said the counties.
seven began their work Dr. King, Mrs. Milton And
here today. Miss Mili will be help'
Joining the UP Agricultural county agricultural ad hoe
Extension staff will be Eolise demonstration agents design
Johnson, Lora Kiser and Helen programs for more than *4,-
Holstein, district vice chair- 4-H Club members ad
men; Dr. Emily King, Ruth some 2,00 4-H leaders throuh-
Milton and Betty Mifflin, state out the state. W. W.Bro ,
4-H staff members, and Alma state 4-H Club leader, said his
Warren, assistant communica- staff is now planing FlorA's
tions specialist. first State 41 (lub Conj r-
Misses Johnson, Kiser and aoe, scheduled June 15-19'at
Holstein will supervise the work the UF for outstanding 4-H ub
of more than 100 home demon- members.
station agents in Florida and Miss Warre is assigned to
will help develop activities Eilonsione Iurmalo dh ed
and projects for some ,01 by Dr. re Sharpe. She .. will
home demonstration club mem- be responible for editing t ne
bers and individual homemak-. i p ieatM i writing
ers. releases for news media pnd
.. They will work with district teaching communications.

Dr. Fry to I
A "-Tr In

Preside
-I.IRK

At Church Council Meet
NEWYORK -TRev. Dr. The meeting Odessa
ranklin Clark FIy, president Ukrainian seaport obvoly
of the Lutheran Church in cleared by the rli,
America, will to Meow proposed by tid World 's
Friday, and then on to Odwabers o the BugAn =
as on the Black Sea to preside urch,the Georgian
over a history meetlg of the Churh ad thie iaa n
Ex ecu tive Comminm t eofb pcal(Baptist) Cl ch.
World Council fd urchei -er i .
Dr. ry was a fted speak.- bC i n
er in Gainesvmle recently rI6. ,
og the coocmio a Cmm m in i
for the VUninrsity ofd Frda P r t b aSpsut revo l"'
He is dairmmof both lbA
Cnral ad E amm Com&
The me o in0kmwill
den a r pal m m
v 1it0 XWal

1al0 u m S pi efl o
C-anu of Chrdh wlmtabe
0 relom s 8 t thbeln

-a Catallemn," I
hen. _m_

Osaing Jan Grmp
As an extra added attraction,
the Lyceum Council wil pre-
sent the Paul Winter Sextet in
two performances in the Uni-
versity Auditorium on Satur-
day, Feb. 15. The Paul Winter
group has had outstanding suc-
cess in concerts at the White
House for the Kennedys and oa
an extended South American

tour for the United States State
Department Without question,
this group is one of the most
refreshing antasteful of the
currently popular modern jan
aggregations. All seats are re-
served and all tickets are 1.50
at the Hub Information Booth
from February 10.
Next week we shall have
more details of Fine Art Festi-
val events, which include a re-
cital of modern dace by the
University of Florida Orchebis
Club, a concert by the Univer-
sity of Florida Symphonic Band
with Richard W. Bowles con-
ducting, a Reader's Theater of
the University of Florida De-
partment of Speech in honor of
Ihakespeare (Quadricentem i a 1,
a Musical presented by the Un-
iversity of Florida chapter of
Sigma Alpha aa lecture
by the distinguished American
composer, author, and music
critic, Virgil Thoeson, on "The
Role of the Universities in the
Creative Arts."

Varied Career
PITTSBURGH (AP)-Michad
A. Musnio has had a varied
career. He was a coal miner,
Oselworer, veteran of both
world wars, a rear admiral in
the Naval Reserve, composer,
ra and a judge at the war
ime *Als in Germany.
Now, at U, a Pennsylvania
Supreme Court justice, he is
bidding for still meath career
-in the U.S. Senate.
The Democratic stae policy

Jaeph Jay Dde clls It a
"bbmvel," a ew tem for a
he of writing wh is b
ng more popular every day.
It is hKistory come aim, ab-
e caracters p ted to
is wm bilnma b ebdi set biMo
Sfr a mark of ficMin that

Mhat aelulylbpt deIdsdown
elmt a rinch l4 drOf a
-"t N mg have a ned.
When it s wel done makes
delightful ad vry -t, rieo
Grat Infidel," has made an x-
cellet picture d the le-
known Frederic mde a, Kingv
of Sicily and bead of 1e Holy
Roman Empire in the first hail
of the 13th century.
7 book might eves he called
an "autoleAovel" because Mr.
Dels has entered so thoroughly
into the thoughts, activities and
passions of his hero that he has,
put it-most comvincingly-bto'
the first person and be speaks
as if be were Frederic himself.

How much of it is Frederic
and bow much Mr. Deiw is
hard to say. Frederic seems
very modern for the 13th cen-
tury and there is a distinct Mth
century flavor about his thought,
his views of science and ulm-
anity and his uncanny foreknow-
ledge of modern medical find.
ings. If it is all true, it is un-
fortunate that such wisdom was
lost and left to be rediscovered
centuries later.
Of course. It bs quite possible

I

True or not "'ie Great In-
fide" Is good reading. It car-
ries you breathless from episode
to epide. You follow the flash-
ing Frederi with his -on
curls waving in the wind through
conquest and Crusade, love and
diplomacy. The story never e-
com too complex. You alw s
know just whem you are and

EW ECO

hit e lbol o a ad Oakt,
amn lor y books, is a rae
tr f

Tmes sed at the mry tais
week bkelm;
UNMHTY AND CURRENT

"A Moder Fach Republie"
(Ma e-France) planning for
a democratic France; 'The
Wis of RevoWti (Sale) -
report on U LathAmerican naC
tios by a correspondent for The
New York Ties; 'Te Politi-
cal Thought o Ma To ng"
(S'hm) adeetao of Mao's
writs, giving night into his
background and tough; "Mn-
golia, Unknown Land" (Bisch)
Spanorama of Mongolia and her
people in text and color photo.
graphs; '"* Compa- t Heistory
of the Revolutionary War" (De-
puy and Depuy) highly read
able, professional analysis of
the war by two U.S. military of-
ficers, 04 map; "Man and the
Conquest of the Poles" (Victor)
- an account of polar expeditions
from the earliest recorded to the
Present.
THEi ARTS MAND LITERATURE
"Art of China, Korea, and
Japan" (Swam) survey of

d to tfted time t*At
is deas dl sol wichs
to grow ad so m b un iel-

Valid or m, Mr. De red-
iert i, m d mser.
th book Is flobriDim tpl-
asary ,a sd es of morn thuI
riu Ml spd.r. deriae, bhen
a prmneing of mall prein
IoN,, a prisoer m ost
of h oyhood, emrgm nlao an
early mahoom d of e vior
and etliro e bri ce. 11 uis
a vacious reader, faailar
with many language ad k
to appreciate the best in other
times ad cultures. He is also
a voracious liver ad clacbes
at every poible sensatio with
mad ensimiano e is knd
good to hiscaptives, ju i b
dealing with his menaies.
If he has ome light m-
blance to "Young Wild Wet the
Dashing Deadshot" and to a
certain Humbert Humbert of
recent literary prominence we
must overlook it. 'e novel is
utobDgra c andam n-
turaly wishes to aow. hnelf
in the best possible light.

more n 2,W years, 51 color la! account of George Abbott as
plates. U black and white la- actor, writer, director, and pr
ratio. ; "Beat Poems o i=" ducer; "Behind the Bathtub"
- Borea one Mountaln Poetry (Audry)- thestory of a French
Awards 1W3; i Best Plays dog, an Alsatian, and her mis.
1, 0" the Burnsa Mn tress, a lY Proessor; "He-
Yearbook; "Highlights of S ry Navarre"(Pearson) -hi
ish Uterature" (Renick)-bi. ography of the French king
lingual anthology, medieval to FICION
the present; "dsected Poems"
(Pax) bilingual edti of a "El Snor Presidente" (As-
selection of the Mexican poet' turias) story of a corrupt and
works: "Collected Poems" dissolute Caribbean dictator;
(MacNee leading "Cadillac Cowboys" (Swarth-
mast of his publied verse out) satirical novel of then
"150 TeheBiqes in Art" (Myers) vasion of the Old West by stand.

Spractical gide to a large
umber of simple te iqes.

yards of the East; "Machinees
of Joy" (Bradbury) colec
tiao of short stories; "Dooms-
day Creek" (Adams) a

"Bamie" (Riey) bgra- "Western" about

an expedi

phy of Theodore Roosevelt's sis-ton to Coma nche territory;
ter, influential member of the "The Fifth Woman" (Fagyas)
Roosevelt family; "Mister Ab- a mystery set in Budapest in
bott" (Abbott) autobiograph- 1956.

SPR

IU

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for about 20 less*a gallon than

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